Discoveriessongs
Twelve new songs are being sung by bowhead whales undertaking their annual spring migration
Presented by
Melissa Hogenboom
Some of the most beautiful and beguiling sounds in the natural world are made by singing animals.
Beautiful due to quality and range of the sounds, and beguiling due to their complexity and the complicated reasons animals sing them.
And perhaps no singing animals have fascinated us more than the great whales.
Bowhead whales are unique among all other whales in that they change their songs within and between years
The songs of humpback or blue whales remain the most well known, but new research is helping to confirm that an even more impressive songster swims, and sings among them.
The bowhead whale has the most impressive repertoire of all whales, and scientists have just recorded 12 unique songs being sung by bowhead whales on their annual migration.
The discovery reveals more about how these enigmatic creatures, which spend much of their lives swimming under thick Arctic sea ice, communicate.
It's a mysterious, musical world under the Arctic ice (Credit: Kate Stafford)
The new research focused on one population of bowhead whales on their annual spring migration along along the west coast of Alaska.
The researchers recorded more unique songs (listen below) during this period of migration than has ever been observed before in this group, which belong to the Bering-Chukchi-Beaufort population, the biggest of four geographically isolated populations.
The study, published in the journal Marine Mammal Science, also found that at least six of these songs were shared among travelling members of the group.
Using underwater microphones called hydrophones, the team recorded songs at two locations and found 12 unique songs (listen below) from 32 individuals.
A previous study recorded a greater number of 66 unique songs, but over a much longer period of one year.
While other species such as the humpback, sperm, and blue whale also sing, it is the bowhead that appears to have the greatest number and diversity of songs.
Such insights have come only recently, as the remote Arctic habitat of the bowhead whale, covered with thick sea ice through much of the year, makes them extremely difficult to observe.