Source of the North Pacific "boing" sound attributed to minke whales.

Shannon Rankin, Jay Barlow
Author Information
  1. Shannon Rankin: Southwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, La Jolla, California 92038, USA.

Abstract

During a recent cetacean survey of the U.S. waters surrounding the Hawaiian Islands, the probable source of the mysterious "boing" sound of the North Pacific Ocean was identified as a minke whale, Balaenoptera acutorostrata. Examination of boing vocalizations from three research surveys confirms previous work that identified two distinct boing vocalization types in the North Pacific. The eastern boing (n = 22) has a pulse repetition rate of 92 s(-1) and a duration of 3.6 s and was found only east of 138 degrees W. The central boing (n = 106) has a pulse repetition rate of 115 s(-1) and a duration of approximately 2.6 s and was found only west of 135 degrees W. Central boing vocalizations produced by a single source (n = 84) indicate that variation in repetition rate and duration of the calls of the individual were not significantly different than the variation among individuals of the same boing type. Despite a slight latitudinal overlap in the vocalizations, pulse repetition rates of the eastern and central boings were distinct.

MeSH Term

Acoustics
Animal Migration
Animals
Minke Whale
Pacific Ocean
Seasons
Vocalization, Animal

Word Cloud

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