File:Campbell's-Monkeys-Use-Affixation-to-Alter-Call-Meaning-pone.0007808.s002.ogg
Summary
| Description |
English: “Hok-oo” are given to a range of disturbances within the canopy, including eagles, the presence of neighbouring groups and, on a few occasions, to a flying squirrel. While producing these calls, males adopt a threat posture, combined with flashing their eyelids, sometimes combined with a short dash towards the disturbance. |
||
| Date | |||
| Source | Audio S2 from Ouattara K, Lemasson A, Zuberbühler K. "Campbell's Monkeys Use Affixation to Alter Call Meaning". PLOS ONE. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0007808. PMID 19915663. PMC: 2771905. | ||
| Author | Ouattara K, Lemasson A, Zuberbühler K | ||
| Permission (Reusing this file) |
|
||
| Provenance |
|
Category:Acoustic stimulation
Category:Audio files from open-access scholarly articles
Category:Audio files of Cercopithecus campbelli
Category:Auditory perception
Category:Behavioral ecology
Category:CC-BY-2.5
Category:Computer simulations
Category:Human evolution
Category:Media from PLOS ONE
Category:Predatory behavior
Category:Signal processing
Category:Sound spectrography
Category:Uploaded with Open Access Media Importer
Category:Uploaded with Open Access Media Importer and needing category review
Category:Vocal production

