Animal Behavior and Cognition (Nov 2024)

Anecdotal Observations of Socially Learned Vocalizations in Harbor Seals

  • Diandra Duengen,
  • Martin Polotzek,
  • Eoin P. O’Sullivan,
  • Andrea Ravignani

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26451/abc.11.03.04.2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 4
pp. 393 – 403

Abstract

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Harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) are more solitary than many other pinnipeds. Yet, they are capable of vocal learning, a form of social learning. Most extant literature examines social animals when investigating social learning, despite sociality not being a prerequisite. Here, we report two formerly silent harbor seals who initiated vocalizations, after having repeatedly observed a conspecific receiving food rewards for vocalizing. Our observations suggest both social and vocal learning in a group of captive harbor seals, a species that lives semi-solitarily in the wild. We propose that, in this case, social learning acted as a shortcut to acquiring food rewards compared to the comparatively costly asocial learning.

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