Have you ever noticed how the groundhogs you see on top often end up being the hardest ones to dig to?
Now a study in the journal Nature may explain why. It turns out that Richardson's Ground Squirrel uses ultrasonic calls, inaudible to most other ears, to sound the alarm and warn others in the colony that a predator is about. The squirrel's ultrasonic calls, dubbed "whisper calls," are in the 50-kilohertz range-far above the 20 kilohertz that humans can hear.
Not surprisingly, there is also some evidence that other kinds of ground squirrels also make ultrasonic calls, such as marmots. Notes Daniel Blumstein, who studies animal alarm calls at UCLA, "Sometimes (the marmots) open their mouths and they shake their bodies as though they are alarm-calling and nothing comes out."
The groundhog you see on top (and that also sees you) probably has just enough time to scurry down and wall itself off in a latrine pit in a side wall of the burrow.
If anyone is looking for a good science project for their kids, a sure-fire winner is to record the sounds of groundhogs and step down the acoustics to see if they too produce ultrasound alarms. My bet is that they do.
1 comment:
A frequency-division type bat detector is what you need here; it steps down the ultrasonic into the range humans can hear. It isn't much good for actually identifying bats from their calls since that needs knowledge of what the frequency is, but it does let you know what's about.
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