2008
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.016055
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Mother–young vocal communication and acoustic recognition promote preferential nursing in sheep

Abstract: SUMMARY In mammals with precocial neonates, exclusive maternal care and investment depend on mutual mother–young recognition. In sheep, this is ensured by rapid olfactory recognition of the neonate by its mother. However, recent studies suggest that other processes may participate in preferential maternal care. We investigated the possibility that acoustic communication promotes preferential nursing of the lamb. In the first of two studies, we examined the association between nursing and vocal a… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Mother‐offspring recognition is found across the animal kingdom, and its importance as a means of facilitating exclusive maternal care and investment is well documented (Sèbe et al . ). Such individual recognition can take a number of forms including visual, olfactory, and acoustic recognition (Tibbetts and Dale ).…”
Section: Terms Used To Describe the Proximity Of The Mothers In Relatmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Mother‐offspring recognition is found across the animal kingdom, and its importance as a means of facilitating exclusive maternal care and investment is well documented (Sèbe et al . ). Such individual recognition can take a number of forms including visual, olfactory, and acoustic recognition (Tibbetts and Dale ).…”
Section: Terms Used To Describe the Proximity Of The Mothers In Relatmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…A point of interest that emerges from the literature is the apparent evolutionary convergence of bleat vocalizations. Bleats are stereotypical plaintive vocalizations that occur across several unrelated species in the context of individual recognition (seal pups: Schustermann & van Parijs, 2003; sheep: Searby & Jouventin, 2003; Sèbe et al , 2008). This highlights a potentially promising area for future research, as it seems likely that their acoustic characteristics are particularly favourable to individual and specifically mother–young recognition.…”
Section: Cues To Individual Identity In Acoustic Signalsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, olfaction is important in establishing maternal recognition by the lamb, and the development of the mother-young bond is reinforced by orogastro-intestinal stimulation ). However, while olfaction is the first proximal sense used (i) by the mother and infant to establish a bond, and (ii) by the male and female to identify social partners, visual (Kendrick et al 2001) and auditory (Sebe et al 2007, Sebe et al 2008 factors are also involved in the expression of social preferences.…”
Section: Social Behaviourmentioning
confidence: 99%