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Acoustic analysis of the alarm call of the Anatolian ground squirrel Spermophilus xanthoprymnus: a description and comparison with alarm calls of the Taurus S. taurensis and European S. citellus ground squirrels

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2012

Abstract

In comparison to some other species of ground squirrels, little is known about alarm calls of the European ground squirrel Spermophilus citellus, occurring in some parts of Central Europe and the Balkans, and essentially nothing is known about alarm calls of the Taurus ground squirrel S. taurensis, recently described from a small area in Taurus Mountains in southern Anatolia, Turkey. In this study, we performed a detailed analysis, description and comparison of alarm calls in these closely related species.

We recorded 20 free-living individuals (10 per species) spontaneously vocalizing toward human in their natural colonies, and analyzed a total of 600 alarm calls (30 per individual). In both species, alarm calls in this context are tonal sounds usually consisting of two different elements.

There is almost no frequency modulation in the first element, while the second element is highly modulated in frequency.