Università degli Studi di Pavia

 

CIBRA

Centro Interdisciplinare di Bioacustica e Ricerche Ambientali

 

 

Palazzo San Tommaso

Aula G1


 Symposia

 

General bioacoustics

G.Pavan

 

In-air communication in mammals

I.Charrier,  D.Reby

 

How to describe, measure and compare complex acoustic communication signals in birds and mammals?

J.Vielliard

 

Animal communication networks: from behaviour to brain

T.Aubin, N.Mathevon

 

Monitoring the Environment: Bioacoustics as a tool for inventory and monitoring of biodiversity

K.Frommolt, R.Marquez, G.Pavan

 

The impacts of anthropogenic noise

Y.Yan

 

2nd European workshop on animal sound research and libraries

X.Eekhout, G.Pavan

 

 

 

Poster Session

 

 


Organizing Committee

 

Centro Interdisciplinare di Bioacustica e Ricerche Ambientali

Gianni Pavan, Claudio Fossati, Michele Manghi, Marco Priano, Elisabetta Bernuzzi

Email address for information cibra@unipv.it

Online information http://www.unipv.it/cibra/xxi_ibac.html

 

Scientific Committee

 

Richard Ranft, Nicolas Mathevon, Isabelle Charrier, Thierry Aubin, Hong Young Yan, Matija Gogala, David Helweg, Dietmar Todt, Rafael Marquez, Karl-Heinz Frommolt, Gianni Pavan, Guido Pinoli, Michela Podestà

 

Organizing Secretariat

 

registration, payment, accomodation bookings & logistics are managed by

 

Marta Daffaro

PRAGMA Congressi

Corso Mazzini 9, 27100 Pavia
Tel.: +39.0382.309579
Fax.: +390382304892

info@pragmacongressi.it     http://www.pragmacongressi.it

 

Congress Venue

 

Università degli Studi di Pavia, Palazzo San Tommaso, Via Siro Comi, Piazza del Lino 2 (see map), ground floor, Aula G1.

 

In the conference hall a Windows computer connected to a projector will be available. An overhead projector will be available as well. To play sounds, a speaker system is connected to the laptop used for powerpoint presentations as well as to a CD and a DAT player. Please ask to the Secretariat if you need other specific equipment.

Presenting Authors are invited to load their presentations before the beginning of each symposium; if possible they are welcome to load and verify the presentation the day before. Accepted media are CD/DVD ROMs and USB memories.

 

Coffee breaks will be in the large poster hall close to the conference hall. The poster hall is equipped with some computers connected to internet, a network printer, a hub to connect your own laptop, and a free wi-fi spot.

 

Shop-Up, The Gift Shop

 

The University of Pavia Gift shop is located in the northern yards of the central buildings (see map); there you can find many nice gifts with the prestigious logo of the world’s oldest university!

 

The University’s Coffee Shop

 

The Coffee Shop is in the same yard of the Gift Shop. Nice place to get a typical Italian coffee or get a light lunch. The buffet of Saturday 15th will be there.

 

Restaurants

 

There are many restaurants, pizzeria, and coffee shops in the town centre. Typical restaurants are also on the other side of the river.

Map of Pavia and relevant places

The map shows the conference location, the colleges and the hotels where congress participants are hosted.

For more information on the town visit the page on how to reach Pavia.

 

Aerial View

 

Scientific Committee Members

 

Richard Ranft
British Library Sound Archive, London, UK
richard.ranft@bl.uk

Dietmar Todt
Institute of Biology, Free University of Berlin, Germany
todt@zedat.fu-berlin.de

Thierry Aubin
Équipe Communications Acoustiques.
NAMC-CNRS, Université Paris Sud
thierry.aubin@u-psud.fr

 

Rafael Marquez
Fonoteca Zoologica, Dept. de Biodiversidad y Biologia Evolutiva
Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), Madrid, Spain
rmarquez@mncn.csic.es

Isabelle Charrier
Équipe Communications Acoustiques.
NAMC-CNRS, Université Paris Sud
isabelle.charrier@u-psud.fr

 

Karl-Heinz Frommolt
Museum für Naturkunde der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Curator of the Animal Sound Archive (Tierstimmenarchiv), Germany
karl-heinz.frommolt@rz.hu-berlin.de

Nicolas Mathevon
Université Jean Monnet & Institut universitaire de France, France
nicolas.mathevon@univ-st-etienne.fr

Gianni Pavan
President of CIBRA, University of Pavia, Italy
gpavan@cibra.unipv.it

Hong Young Yan
Senior Research Fellow
Professor, Institute of Fishery Sciences, National Taiwan University
Sensory Electrophysiology lab., Institute of Cellular & Organismic Biology
Taiwan National Academy of Sciences (Academia Sinica), Taiwan
hyyan@gate.sinica.edu.tw

Guido Pinoli
Direttore Parco Pineta di Tradate e Appiano Gentile, Italy
guidopinoli@freemail.it

 

Matija Gogala
Secretary General
Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Ljubljana, Slovenia
matija.gogala@guest.arnes.si

Michela Podesta
Curator of the Vertebrate Department.
Natural History Museum, Milan, Italy
Michela.Podesta@comune.milano.it

David A. Helweg
Deputy Center Director
USGS Pacific Island Ecosystems Research Center, Hawaii, US
dhelweg@usgs.gov

 

 

 

Symposia & other events

 

Saturday, 15th

 

08:15          Registration  

                    (the registration desk will open on Friday 14th at 16:00)


09:00
          Opening - Welcome of the Authorities

09:30          General bioacoustics

 

14:30          In-air communication in mammals

 

Sunday, 16th

 
09:00          How to describe, measure and compare complex acoustic
-------------- communication signals in birds and mammals?

 

14:30          Animal communication networks: from behaviour to brain

 

Monday, 17th

 

09:00          The impacts of anthropogenic noise

 

14:30          Monitoring the Environment: Bioacoustics as a tool for inventory and
-------------- monitoring of biodiversity

 

20:30          Social Dinner

 

Tuesday, 18th

 

09:00          Technical lectures & demonstrations / Poster Session

 

11:00          AGM

 

14:00          2nd European workshop on animal sound research and libraries

                   & Round Table

 

18:30          Closing

 

XXI IBAC Congress Program

 

Friday 14th PM

 

16:00-19:00

Registration

 

Saturday 15th AM

 

Opening

 

8:15

Registration

 

 

9:00

Conference Opening

 

 Welcome of the Authorities

 

 Welcome of Patrick Sellar, President of IBAC

 

General Bioacoustics                                   (G.Pavan)

 

 

9:30

Tide and social interactions modulate the vocal behaviour of the Lusitanian toadfish, Halobatrachus didactylus

 

M.C.P. Amorim,  J.M. Simões,  V.C. Almada,  P.J. Fonseca

 

 

9:45

Development of ultrasound social calls made by adult Rhinolophus ferrumequinum bats from infant bat ultrasound calls

 

M. Andrews, T.P. McOwat, P.T. Andrews, R.J. Haycock

   

10:00

The role of acoustic dispersion in the mouths of bats during echolocation

 

P.T. Andrews

   

10:15

Auditory temporal resolution in a cicada is enhanced by the characteristics of the calling song

 

P.J. Fonseca,  T. Correia

 

 

10:30

Coffee Break

 

 

11:00

Surprizing discoveries in palaearctic mountain cicadas by acoustic research

 

M. Gogala, T. Trilar, S. Drosopoulos

 

 

11:15

The advertisement calls of Stripless treefrog (Hyla meridionalis) and European treefrogs (H. arborea): sympatry versus allopatry

 

 C. Moreira, R. Marquez, E. Crespo

   

11:30

Differences in acoustic signals of five Lake Malawi cichlid species (Pseudotropheus spp.): Implications for evolutionary processes

 

J.M. Simões, P. Fonseca, G. Turner, M.C.P. Amorim

 

 

11:45

The cicadas from the genus Pagiphora (Hemiptera, Cicadidae) are singing in surprisingly low frequencies

 

T. Trilar,  M. Gogala

 

 

12:00

Stridulation in sympatric species of Pachycondyla (Formicidae, Ponerinae): from the production organ to behavioural coding

 

F. Rybak, P. Marchand,  D. Fresneau

 

 

12:15

Intra-individual variation of serin Serinus serinus song

 

A. Mamede, P.G. Mota

 

 

12:30

Vocal communication of Siberian crane Grus leucogeranus: it’s doesn’t matter, who are you – your sex is important

 

E.V. Bragina, I.R. Beme

 

Lunch time: buffet in the yards of the University of Pavia

(University Coffee Shop)

 

Saturday 15th PM

 

In-air communication in mammals                     (I.Charrier, D.Reby)

 

14:30

Calf’s vocal recognition by mother in Atlantic walrus: a first field experimental study

 

I. Charrier,  I. Mathevon, T.  Aubin

 

 

14:45

Application of the source-filter theory and PSOLA re-synthesis to the study of mammal vocal communication

 

D. Reby

 

 

15:00

How and when do lambs recognize the bleats of their mothers?

 

F. Sèbe, T. Aubin, O. Sèbe,  G. Perrin, R. Nowak, P. Poindron

 

 

15:15

Knee clicking reflects body size of eland bulls: an unusual source of information?

 

J. Bro-Jørgensen

   

15:30

 Human listeners attend to size information in domestic dog growls

 

 A.M. Taylor,  D. Reby

   

15:45

Fundamental frequency and formant frequencies of groans encode information about male quality in fallow deer (Dama dama)

 

A.G. McElligott, E. Vannoni

 

 

16:00

On the information content of Barbary macaque copulation calls

 

J. Fischer

 

 

16:15

Song complexity in the indris

 

M. Gamba, V. Sorrentino, L. Favaro, V. Torti, C. Giacoma

 

 

16:30

Coffee Break

 

 

17:00

On the structure of male rodent courtship songs

 

K. Hammerschmidt,  J. Fischer

 

 

17:15

Changes in the acoustic structure of fallow buck groans during the rut

 

E. Vannoni  and A. G. McElligott, 

 

 

17:30

The temporal instability of individual alarm calls in the spleckled ground squirrels (Spermophilus suslicus)

 

I.A. Volodin, V.A. Mastrova,  E.V. Volodina

 

 

17:45

Selection for tame or aggressive behaviour toward humans affects vocalization in the red fox Vulpes vulpes

 

E.V. Volodina, S.S. Gogoleva, I.A. Volodin, L.N. Trut

 


18:00

Bellow amplitude of bison (Bison bison) reflects male quality, motivation, and seasonal condition

 

M.T. Wyman, M.S. Mooring, B.J. McCowan, K. Hodge,  L.A. Hart

 

Sunday 16th AM

 

How to describe, measure and compare complex acoustic communication signals in birds and mammals? (J.Vielliard)

 

09:00

Evolutionary trends towards higher complexity in bird songs

 

J. Vielliard

 

 

09:15

Concepts and methods for dealing with large vocal repertoires: from thrushes to marine mammals

 

D. Todt

 


09:30

The signal repertoire of Killer Whales Orcinus orca: how social factors can influence the development of dialects

 

J. Cirillo, J. Almunia, D. Todt

   

9:45

Repertoire size and entropy measures: comparative results in versatile songs

 

M. L. da Silva

   

 10:00

 Measuring variability with bits and q-bits

 

 J. R. Castilho Piqueira


 

10:30

Coffee Break

 

 

11:00

Review of spectral trajectory analysis (STA), an unsupervised learning method for quantifying vocal repertoires

 

A. Thorn

 

 

11:15

Analysis of Male Pied Flycatcher (Ficedula hypoleuca) Song Complexity

 

J.T. Tanttu,  J. Turunen, T. Laaksonen, P. Sirkiä

 

 

11:30 Discussion
   

12:00-13:00

Poster session

 

Lunch time, enjoy the quiet town centre

 

Sunday 16th PM

 

Animal communication networks: from behaviour to brain                                                                                           (T.Aubin, N.Mathevon)

 

14:30

Transmission of acoustic signals and information transfer in a communication network

 

M. Naguib

 

 

14:45

The group signature in the complex song of a songbird, the skylark Alauda arvensis

 

E. Briefer, F. Rybak, T. Aubin

 

 

15:00

How juveniles black caimans use sounds to communicate?

 

A.L. Vergne, N. Mathevon,  T. Aubin,  P. Taylor

 

 

15:15

Inter-sexual acoustic communication in Xenopus laevis: temporal coding of gender and spectral coding of sex-appeal

 

C. Vignal

 

 

15:30

Alarm calling and sentinel activity in Arabian babblers

 

C. Sommer

 

 

15:45

The call of the Yelkouan shearwater: sexual and individual identities

 

C. Curé, N. Mathevon, T. Aubin

 

 

16:00

Sound detection and communication in the European gudgeon Gobio gobio in a shallow creek

 

L.E. Wysocki,  F. Ladich

 

 

16:15

Responses to natural classes of songs in the auditory telencephalon of adult male starlings

 

I. George, H. Cousillas, J.-P. Richard, M. Hausberger

 

 

16:30

Coffee Break

 

 

17:00

Heterospecific stimulation, attention and song learning in starlings: a long-term study

 

F. Rousseau, L. Henry, C. Sankey, C. Aubry,  M. Hausberger 

 

 

17:15

Developmental song learning in the zebra finch

 

S. Derégnaucourt, M. Gahr

 

 

17:30

Song and brain development of canaries raised under restricted acoustic environments

 

S. Leitner, S. Belzner, C. K. Catchpole

 

 

17:45

Acoustic features of female song vary with competitive context in sex-role reversed African black coucals (Centropus grillii)

 

N. Geberzahn,  W. Goymann, C. Ten Cate 

 

 

18:00

Chaffinch song variation and its meaning in the context of sexual selection

 

A. Leitao, K. Riebel

 

Monday 17th AM

 

Monitoring the Environment: Bioacoustics as a tool for inventory and monitoring of biodiversity 

                                                                                                  (K.Frommolt, R.Marquez, G.Pavan) 

 

09:00

Playback experiment as a tool for detecting genetic diversity: combined bioacoustic and DNA data to assess passerine biodiversity in Southeast Asia

 

M. Gelang

 

 

09:15

Terrestrial sound monitoring systems, a methodology for calibration and data processing

 

R. Márquez, D. Llusia, R. Bowker

 

 

09:30

Acoustic Monitoring of Bird Species in a Riparian Zone in Kentucky, USA Using an Automated Recording System

 

A. Meier, O. Meier, J. Bowers, C. Hamilton, M. G. Skaggs, R. Marquez and R. G. Bowker.

 

 

09:45

Nearest-Neighbor Techniques for the Monitoring of Nocturnal Flight Calls

 

H. Figueroa, A. Farnsworth

 

 

10:00

Geographical variation in the songs of North Atlantic blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus) and its potential use in population monitoring

 

L. Di Iorio, I. Voellmy, S. Tgetgel, C.W. Clark

 

 

10:15

Automated Detection of Eurasian Bittern (Botaurus stellaris) Calls for Acoustical Wildlife Monitoring

 

R. Bardeli,  K.-H. Tauchert

 

 

10:30

Coffee Break

 

 

11:00

Bioacoustic Monitoring of Birds

 

K.-H. Frommolt,  K.-H. Tauchert

 

 

11:15

Acoustic identification of bats using support vector machines and ensembles of neural networks

 

S. Parsons, G. Jones, J. Szewczak, R. Redgwell

 

 

11:30

Computer-aided inventories of bioacoustic diversity: first results and future needs

 

K. Riede

 

 

11:45

Acoustic monitoring in the South-Western Indian Ocean reveals call characteristics and seasonal occurrence of two blue whale subspecies

 

F. Samaran, I. Charrier,  T. Aubin, O. Adam, J.-F. Motsch, R. Gérard, C. Guinet 

 

 

12:00

Advertisement call characteristics of two discoglossid allopatric subspecies, Bombina b.bombina and B.b.arifiyensis: acoustical implications for their subspecies recognition

 

U. Kaya

 

 

12:15

Automatic Detection of Locustella luscinioides in Natural Environments

 

D. Wolff, R. Bardeli, F. Kurth, K.-H. Tauchert 

 

 

12:30

On the use of image processing to identify bioacoustic signals

 

T. S. Brandes

 

Lunch time

 

Monday 17th PM

 

The impacts of anthropogenic noise                              (Y.Yan)

 

14:30

Ambient noise as a selective force for ultrasonic communication in frogs

 

P.M. Narins, A.S. Feng, Jun-Xian Shen

 

 

14:45

Effects of traffic noise on acoustic communication in birds

 

K.M. Parris

 

 

15:00

Bird song and noise: short- and long-term adaptations of avian vocalizations

 

H. Brumm

 

 

15:15

Effects of Urban Noise on Avian Song

 

K. Seger, A. Rodewald, J. Soha

 

 

15:30

Divergence in song and morphology between city and forest populations of the European blackbird

 

E. Ripmeester,  H. Slabbekoorn

 

 

15:45

Accessory functions of the lateral line in inducing the startle reflex behaviour to high intensity sound

 

Kazuhiko Anraku

 

 

16:00

Assessing effects of an acoustic marine geophysical survey on the behaviour of bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops truncatus

 

S. Van der Woude

 

 

16:15

Characterization of Noises Generated by Aerators and its Possible Impacts on Cultured Fish and Shrimp

 

Hong Young Yan, Hsin-Yi Yu, Wu Jung Lee

 

 

16:30

Coffee Break

 

 

17:00-19:00

Poster Session

 

20:30      Social Dinner at Collegio Cairoli

                         Don’t forget your reservation ticket!   See the map to locate it!

 

Tuesday 18th AM

 

Technical Session

 

09:00

Microphones & Parabolas to capture nature sounds by K. Strandberg

 

 

09:30

 

 

 

10:00

Poster session

10:30

Coffee break

11:00

Poster session

11:30

AGM

 

Tuesday 18th PM

 

2nd European workshop on animal sound

research and libraries & Round Table    

Organized within the frame of EDIT WP4                   (X. Eekhout, G.Pavan)

 

14:00

Sound libraries: aims, roles, responsibilities

 

R. Ranft

 

 

14:10

Fonoteca Zoologica” www.FonoZoo.com the web-based animal sound library of the Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), Madrid, Spain

 

R. Márquez, X. Eekhout & M. Pérez

 

 

14:20

Fonoteca ZOOLÒGICA, Museu de Ciències Naturals de la Ciutadella de Barcelona. Past, Present and Future

 

A. Omedes, A. M. Figuerola

 

 

14:30

Current activities at the Humboldt-University animal sound archive

 

K.-H. Frommolt

 

 

14:40

ASA, the Amazonian Sound Archive

 

J.M.E. Vielliard

 

 

14:50

Sound libraries at CIBRA

 

G. Pavan, C. Fossati, M. Manghi, M. Priano

 

 

15:00

Slovenian Wildlife Sound Archive

 

T. Trilar and M. Gogala

   

15:10

BARN (Bioacoustic Resource Network) On Building a Distributed Network of Annotated Sound Libraries to Support Bioacoustics Research

 

 H. Figueroa

   

15:20

Funding opportunities for a network in Bioacoustics within EU's 7th Framework Program

 

X. Eekhout

 

 

15:30

Questions & Answers

 

 

15:40

Coffee Break

 

 

16:10

Round Table: action plan for objectives of the EWASRL

formulated at the EDIT-sponsored first workshop,
27-30 September 2006 - see http://www.ibac.info/bioac_collections.html

Introduction by Rafael Marquez & Richard Ranft

Proposal of bylaws and webpage of the "European Network of Bioacoustics Collections for Taxonomy and Conservation" by Xavier Eekhout

18:00

Final Remarks

 

 

18:30

Conclusion of the Congress

 

 

Posters

TOOLS & EQUIPMENT

1          Freely faceted classification for a BioAcoustic Reference Database
            C. Gnoli, G. Pavan, G. Merli, M. Pria
no, E. Bernuzzi

2          Machine Learning Techniques for the Classification of Orthoptera Songs
           
F. Schwenker, D. Latif, C. Thiel, K. Riede, G. Palm

3          Seewave: a sound analysis multi-tool
           
J. Sueur, T. Aubin, C. Simonis-Sueur

4          SeaWave. Real-time sound analysis tool for PAM, research and education
            G. Pavan

5          Framework for develop prototype bioacoustic devices in aid of open sea Killer Whales
           
protection
           
J.P. Luke, J. Almunia, F. Rosa

6          An Automated Digital Sound Recording System: The Amphibulator
            M. Cambron, R. Márquez, J. Bowers, A. Meier,  R. G. Bowker

7          A software tool for distributing/collecting digital audio on a network
            M. Bassanini, G. Pavan 

8          New tools for monitoring noise in both terrestrial and acquatic environments
            G. Pavan, M. Manghi

9          A new generation of bottom recorders
            M. Manghi, G. Pavan

10        A call monitoring system to study acoustic communicaton in anurans
            V.B. Zanollo, V. Marconi, G. Berto, L. Spagnolo, L. Tontini, M. Gamba, C. Greco, S.
            Castellano.

11        Avian flight calls during nocturnal migration: automated recording, detection and species
            identification

           
T. Schrama, M. Poot, M. Robb & H. Slabbekoorn

 

 INSECTS

 

12        Morphology of the stridulation organs in various species of Trogidae (Coleoptera),
            with an initial study of distress signals in Trox cadaverinus Ill. and T. scaber (L.)

            J. Beneš

13        Stridulatory organ and stress-induced sound of females of the velvet ant, Myrmilla
      
      capitata (Hymenoptera: Mutillidae)
            C. Polidori, C. Settanni, L. Borruso, F. Gaudesi, G. Pavan

14        Geographic variation in the male calling song of Isophya posthumoidalis (Orthoptera,
           
Tettigonioidea, Phaneropteridae)
            K. M. Orci, G. Szövényi, B. Nagy

 

      MARINE MAMMALS

 

15        Fin whale, Balaenoptera physalus, reaction to an earthquake
            J.-P. Gallo-Reynoso, J. Égido-Villarreal,  G. Martínez-Villalba

16        Whistles structure of two populations of Sotalia dolphins (Cetacea: Delphinidae) in Pará
            State, Brazil
            N.R. Emin de Lima,  M.L. da Silva

17        Phonetic description of seven delphinid species whistles recorded in the Mediterranean
            Sea
           
M. Azzolin, A. Gannier, A. Cañadas, N. Perez-Gimeno, M. Gamba, M. O. Lammers, C.
            Giacoma

18        NEMO and way ahed
           
G. Pavan, G. Riccobene, NEMO Collaboration

19        The sonar of dolphins: behavioral experiments versus auditory evoked potential methods
            G. Zaslavski

20        Experiments on automated detection and clustering of sounds of Tursiops truncatus
           
S. Huebner

 

      TERRESTRIAL MAMMALS

 

21        Influences of the habitat on usage and structure of vocalizations in olive baboons (Papio
           
hamadryas anubis)
           
E. Ey, K. Hammerschmidt, D. Zinner,  J. Fischer

22        The Acoustic Repertoire of Asian Elephants (Elephas maximus) in Captivity
            M. Artelt, C. Scharff

23        Acoustic communication in African elephants (Loxodonta africana): Who is calling?
           
R. Lintner, A. S. Stoeger-Horwath, H. M. Schwammer, H. Kratochvil

24        Early vocal ontogeny in African elephants
           
A. S. Stoeger-Horwath, S. Stoeger, H. Schwammer,  H. Kratochvil,  R. Lintner

25        It´s all about freshness - Stimuli eliciting ultrasonic vocalizations from wild male house             mice (Mus musculus musculus)
            F. Hoffmann, K. Musolf, D. Penn

26        Does maternal stress affect ultrasonic vocalizations in mice?
            D. Oddi, L. Garbugino, F.R. D’Amato, E. Prato Previde, A. Moles

 

27        The undistinguishable alarm whistle frequencies in adult and juvenile ground squirrels:
            the way to avoid an age-dependent risk?

            V. A. Matrosova, I. A. Volodin, E. V. Volodina

28        Howling playback as a tool for monitoring wolf packs: tests of signal propagation and
            acoustic
frequency discrimination
            F. Sebe, C. Duchamp, N. Heitz, R. Latini, T. Aubin

BIRDS


29        Vocal repertoire of wild breeding Orange-winged Parrot Amazona amazonica in
            Amazonia
            L. Negrão de Moura,  M.L. da Silva

30        Species-specific differences in the timing of the dawn chorus in Passerines
            G. Solís, A. Dreiss, Y. Espmark, H. Lampe, T. Limburg, P. Perret, P. Slater, N.Yoccoz,  D.Gil

31        Concerning the periods of existence of Redwing’s (Turdus iliacus) local dialects
            L.A. Osipova

32        Signals of need and identity – the development of multi-component begging calls in
            colonial
weaver birds
           
H. Reers, A. Jacot
33        Segmentation patterns in African Grey Parrot (Psittacus erithacus) vocal production
           
S. Masin, L. Bottoni, R. Massa,  D. Lenti Boero

34        Individual-specific information is contained in domesticated canary songs
            C. Del Negro,  K. Lehongre

35        The long-term stability of pair-specific duet structures in the red-crowned crane Grus
            japonensis can be used for the vocal-based monitoring of territorial pairs through the
            years
           
A.V. Klenova, I.A. Volodin, E.V. Volodina

36        Iberian Azure-winged magpie (Cyanopica (cyana) cooki) nestlings begging calls: call

            characterization and hunger signalling
            P.A.M. Marques

37        Acoustic monitoring of a sensitive species to forest fragmentation: the Ocellated antbird
           
Araya, Yi-men

38        Same-sex pair bonds in Zebra finches
            J. Elie, C. Vignal,  N. Mathevo

39        Additive signal processing in nightingales (Luscinia megarhynchos)
           
P. Sprau, R. Schmidt, T. Roth, V. Amrhein, M. Naguib
40        Call repertoire of an endemic avian species the Indian Chat Cercomela fusca
           
Vinaya Kumar Sethi & Dinesh Bhatt

41        First recordings of ural owl (Strix uralensis) vocalizations in the Cansiglio forest (N-E
            Veneto region,
Italy). A further proof of presence

            A. Favaretto, F. Mezzavilla, S. Lombardo, G. Pavan

42        Longitudinal study of song type repertoire changes in common nightingales (Luscinia
           
megarhynchos)
            Sarah Kiefer

 

      AMPHIBIANS

 

43        Calling parameters and the effect of temperature in Bombina bombina and Bombina
            variegata
            R. Márquez, D. Cogalniceanu, D. Llusia, X. Eekhout, G.M. Tena

44        Acoustical and thermal monitoring of Iberian population of anurans. Preliminary
            comparative
results with Alytes cisternasii
            R. Márquez, D. Llusia, X. Eekhout, J.F. Beltrán, J.P. Sousa Do Amaral, C. Moreira, R.
            Bowker & M. Cambron.

FISHES

45        Vocal behaviour during territorial intrusions in the Lusitanian toadfish: mating
            boatwhistles are
also a territorial ‘keep-out signal’
           
M.C.P. Amorim, J.M. Simões,  V.C. Almada , P. J. Fonseca

46        Acoustic communication in the Lusitanian toadfish, Halobatrachus didactylus: evidence
            for an unusual large vocal repertoire

            M.C.P. Amorim, J.M. Simões, V.C. Almada, P.J. Fonseca

47        Acoustic Signaling – a substrate for Sexual Selection in African Chiclids?
            M.J. Van Staaden, A.R. Smith

48        Evaluating the impact of small boat noise on marine protected area fish species: a DBht
            (species) approach as management tool
            A. Codarin, L.E. Wisocki, F. Ladich, A. Farina, M. Spoto, M. Picciulin,

49        Why so noisy during spawning:  sound production in Catonotus darters
            C.E. Johnston, D.E. Holt

50        Ambient and anthropogenic noise in a plain river in Northern Italy
            C. Fossati, G. Pavan, M. Priano

 

      OTHER TOPICS

 

51        The value of information – What to communicate?
           
A. Mamede, P.G. Mota

52        Neurofunctional spectrographic analysis of cry of brain injured asphyxiated: a
            physioacoustic and clinical study

            D. Lenti Boero,  C. Lenti

53        Cry of preterm infants recorded at term: a spectrographic study
            D. Lenti Boero,  C. Lenti
54        Effect of propagation on speech in natural middles
   
         J. Meyer, L. Dentel
55       The role of Sound Libraries in the development of education and conservation programs
           G. Pavan, G.Pinoli

56       The sounds of life on earth: wildlife sounds in The British Library Sound Archive

           C. Tipp


Back to the XXI IBAC page

CIBRA Home Page