ibac 2017 haridwar, india poster presentations...automatic classification of orcinus orca calls...
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IBAC 2017 Haridwar, India
Poster Presentations
Poster No. 01-40: Poster session-1 (Monday, 09 October, 2017)
Poster No. 41-80: Poster session-2 (Tuesday, 10 October, 2017)
P.
No Title of abstract Presenter Affiliation
1
Effect of traffic noise on song
learning in Zebra finches
(Taeniopygia guttata)
Adriana Dorado-
Correa
Max Planck Institute for Ornithology,
Seewiesen, Germany
Email: amdorado86@gmail.com
2 Vocal repertoire ontogeny in the
Babbling bat, Saccopteryx bilineata
Ahana Aurora
Fernendez
Free University of Berlin, Berlin , Germany
Email: fernendez.aurora.ahana@gmail.com
3
Clustering technology for the
analysis and classification of
bioacoustic vocalizations
Ian Agranat
Wildlife Acoustics, Inc., 3 Mill & Main Place, Suite 210, Maynard, Massachusetts 01754-
2657, USA
Phone: +1 (978) 369-5225,
Email: ian@wildlifeacoustics.com
4
Comparison of song types in east
and west populations of Himalayan
flycatcher species having different
morphs
Ashutosh Singh Wildlife Institute of India, Chandrabani, Dehradun, India
Email: luckysingh@gmail.com
5 Vocal development in Northern
goshawk (Accipiter gentilis)
Alexandra
Marchenko
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of
Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University,
Moscow, Russia Phone: +79153949953
Email: ptyhozoon@gmail.com
6 Vocal activity of Tawny owl in Central Apennine (Italy): An
automatic voice detection approach
Alexandra
Pruchova
Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science,
University of South Bohemia, Branišovská1760, ČeskéBudějovice, 370 05,
Czech Republic Email: alex.pruchova@gmail.com
7
A common coding strategy in different vocal systems: Use of the
complex call by Elliot’s
Laughningthrush (Trochalopteron elliotii) and use of the song
repertoire by Claudia’ Leaf warbler
(Phylloscopus claudiae)
Alexey Opaev
Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution of
Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow
119071, Russian Federation Phone: +74991354103
Email: aleskei.opaev@gmail.com
8
Duetting in the Yellow-breasted boubou (Laniarius atroflavus):
Natural variation in duets and cues
for identity recognition in male and female calls
Amie Wheeldon
Department of Behavioural Ecology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Umultowska 89, 61-
616 Poznań, Poland
Phone: +48 696 911 614 Email: amiewheeldon@gmail.com
9
Long-term dynamics of song types
in the repertoire of the Moscow
urban population of the Thrush
nightingale (Luscinia luscinia)
Anastasiia
Samokhvalova
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of
Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University,
Leninskie, Gory, d.1, k.12, Moscow, Russia
Phone: +79852789985
Email: dronozhka@yandex.ru
2
10
Automatic detection of Fin whale
calls: Is available software good
enough?
Andrea Bonilla-Garzón
Departamento de ciencias del mar y de la
tierra.Universidad Autónoma de Baja California Sur, 23080 La Paz, B.C.S., México
Email: nabonillag@unal.edu.co
11 Description of vocalization of Edible dormouse Glis glis (L)
Anna Marchewka
Department of Systematic Zoology, Faculty of
Biology, Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland
Email: annamarchewka1@gmail.com
12 Entropy-based segmentation of bird
calls using fourier transform phase Anshul Thakur
SCEE, IIT Mandi, India
Email:anshul_thakur@students.iitmandi.ac.in
13 Repertoire size & yearly variation in the song structure of Oriental
magpie robin
Amar Singh
Department of Zoology and Environmental
Science, Gurukula Kangri University,
Haridwar, Uttarakhand, India
Email: amarhdw@gmail.com
14 Mining noise affects insect
communication in Atlantic forest
Renata Sausa
Lima
Departamento de Fisiologia, Universidade
Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Avenida
Senador Salgado Filho, 3000, Bairro Lagoa Nova, Natal, RN, 59078-970, Brazil
Email: sousalima.renata@gmail.com
15 Underwater ecoacoustics as a monitoring tool in freshwater
environments
Camille
Desjonquères
Department of Biological sciences, University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 3209 N Maryland Ave, Milwaukee, WI 53201, United States
Phone: +14144584058
Email: desjonqu@uwm.edu
16
Vocalization pattern of Common
tailorbird in urban habitats of Delhi,
India
Manoj Singh
School of Environmental Sciences, Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi-110085, India
Email: msingh.jnu@gmail.com
17
Phylogenetic analysis of Manakins
(Pipridae) using song related characters
Daniel Capella
Department of Ecology and Zoology, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil
Phone: +5548984136780
Email: danielbcapella@gmail.com
18
Sex and age-class acoustic variation of Pannonian Red deer (Cervus
elaphus hippelaphus) from South
Hungary
Daria Yurlova
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University,
Vorobiovy Gory, 1/12, Moscow, Russia
Email: yurlowa.darya@gmail.com
19
Relationship between song
repertoire size with nesting success,
territory size and territorial conflict
in Pied bush chat (Saxicola caprata)
Dinesh Bhatt
Department of Zoology and Evs. Science
Gurukula Kangri University Haridwar, India
Email: dineshharidwar@gmail.com
20
BioAcoustica: A free and open
repository and analysis platform for bioacoustics
Edward Baker
Department of Electronics, University of York,
York, YO10 5DD, UK Email: ed.baker@york.ac.uk
21
Acoustic diversity across
subspecies of Red deer (Cervus
elaphus)
Elena Volodina
Scientific Research Department, Moscow Zoo,
Bolshaya Gruzinskaya str.1 Moscow, Russia
Email: volodinsvoc@mail.ru
22
Catch a fire - Soundscape after a
wildfire in an area of Brazilian
Savannah
Eliziane Oliveira
FederalUniversity of Rio Grande do Norte,
Brazil Email: eliziane.garcia@gmail.com
23 Indian soundscapes: An acoustic
journey Eloisa Matheu
Museu de Ciències Naturals, Passeig Picasso s/n, 08003 Barcelona, Spain
Email: eloisamatheu@gmail.com
24
Who am I when calling? Vocal
signature of sex and individuality in a cooperative breeder species of
bird, the Sociable weaver
(Philetairus socius)
Fanny Rybak
University Paris-Sud, Neuro PSI, UMR 9197,
Bât. 446, 91405 Orsay cedex, France
Phone : + 33 1 6915 68 52 Email : fanny.rybak@u-psud.fr
3
25 Automatic classification of Orcinus
orca calls using non-linear methods
Fernando Rosa
González
La Laguna University and Loro Parque
Foundation, Espana Email: fernandostrut@gmail.com
26
First analysis of soundscape
biodiversity and anthrophony in
tropical rainforests of North Malaysian Peninsula
Francesc Llimona Biological Station Collserola Natural Park. Carretera de l'Esglèsia, Barcelona, Spain
Email: fllimona@parccollserola.net
27
Individual vocal recognition in
adult Japanese quails (Coturnix
japonica)
Hélène Courvoisier
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique,
Centre de Neuroscience Paris-Sud, Université
Paris-Sud, UMR 8195, 91405 Orsay, France
28
Patterns of ultrasonic echolocation
pulses in a bush-climbing rodent species with reduced eyes
Ilya Volodin
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Lomonosov
Moscow State University, Vorobiovy Gory,
1/12, Moscow 119234, Russia Phone:+7-917-5449505,
Email: volodinsvoc@gmail.com
29
Cattle bulls can produce low-
frequency roaring and high-
frequency bugling with an unspecialized larynx
Ilya Volodin
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Lomonosov
Moscow State University, Vorobiovy Gory, 1/12, Moscow 119234, Russia
Phone:+7-917-5449505
Email: volodinsvoc@gmail.com
30
A new approach for reducing false
positives of automated identification models in a multiple
species context
Ivan Campos
School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland, Private Bag 92019, Auckland 1142,
New Zealand Phone: +64 0223033558 Email: ivanbcampos@gmail.com
31 Acoustic communication in
Gharials (Gavialis gangeticus) Jailabdeen A.
Madras Crocodile Bank Trust, 217/356, Agan
Nagar 3rd St, Arakkonam 631002, TN, India
Phone: +91 8006100912 Email: jaiwildlife@gmail.com
32 Seasonality in vocal activity patterns of birds along altitudinal
gradient in Afrotropic rainforest
Jana Vokurkova
Department of Ecology, Faculty of Science,
Charles University, Vinicna 7, 128 44 Prague 2,
Czech Republic Phone: +420 728637019,
Email: jankavok@seznam.cz
33 Stochastic methods applied to the detection of changes in the animal
communication pattern
João Marcelo
Brazão Protázio
Federal University of Pará Institute of Exact and Natural Sciences Pará, Brazil
Email: mprotazio@gmail.com
34 A mathematical energy operator to characterize Orcinus orca calls
Jose Carlos Sanluis
Industrial Engineering Department, Universidad
de La Laguna, España
Phone: +34 606077991
Email: jsanluis@ull.es
35
Vocal identity and nonlinear phenomena in the alarm calls of a
lagomorph species, the Alpine pika
(Ochotona alpine)
Julia
Kozhevnikova
Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Vorobiovy Gory,
1/12, Moscow 119234, Russia
Email: julia_k98@mail.ru
36
Comparison of encoding strategies
of human language in two drummed speech traditions
Julien Meyer
Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, GIPSA-Lab, Grenoble, France
Phone: +33476824117,
Email: julien.meyer@gipsa-lab.grenoble-inp.fr
37 Documenting female bird song
diversity with citizen scientists Karan J. Odom
Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, Ithaca, USA
Email: kjo43@cornell.edu
38
Female response choice in an
acoustic-vibrational dual mode
communication system in a pseudophylline Bushcricket
Kaveri
Rajaraman
Ashoka University, Rajiv Gandhi Education City, National Capital Region, P.S. Rai,
Sonepat, Haryana 131029, India
Phone: +918179542651
Email: kaveri.indira@gmail.com
4
39
Underwater soundscape analysis of
the Malvan: A shallow water area of the West Coast of India (WCI)
Kranthi Kumar
CSIR, National Institute of Oceanography Dona
Paula Goa, India
Email: kranthikumarocean@gmail.com
40 Suppression of inaccuracies in an
avian audiogram Ladislav Ptacek
Laboratory of Electronics & Audio Equipments,
Institute of Physics and Biophysics,
Branisovska, Ceske Budejovice Phone: 38 777 6268
Email: lptacek@prf.jcu.cz
41
Maned wolf long range vocalization
propagation and conspecifics’
responses to playback in the wild
Luane S Ferreira
Physiology Department, Federal University of
Rio Grande do Norte State, Natal, RN, Brazil Phone: +55 84 991129011
Email: fsluane@gmail.com
42 Observations on acoustic behavior and ecology of an Indian weta
(Orthoptera: Anostostomatidae)
Manisha Tomar Department of Environmental Studies University of Delhi, New Delhi, India
Email: manishatomar3@gmail.com
43
Bioacoustics or pitfall traps:
Comparison of a modern and traditional method to estimate
Ensifera richness
Manisha
Tomar/Swati
Diwakar
Department of Environmental Studies
University of Delhi, New Delhi-110007, India
Email: manishatomar3@gmail.com
44
Soundscape ecology of Garhwal Himalayan region
Manoj Kumar
Riyal /Nikhil
Kumar Rajput
Department of Physics Government Post
Graduate College,Kotdwara, Pauri Garhwal, Uttarakhand, India
Email: manoj.riyal@gmail.com
45
Testosterone influences the song
structure and song rate in free living
Wood warblers (Phylloscopus sibilatrix)
Maria Goretskaia
Faculty of Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Leninskie gory 1-12, Moscow,
Russia Phone: +79161658737,
Email: m.goretskaia@gmail.com
46
Plasmatic testosterone levels and
vocal activity in males of
Batrachyla taeniata in field and captivity conditions
Maricel Quispe
Program of Physiology and Biophysics,
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of
Medicine, University of Chile, Chile
Email: maricequispe@gmail.com
47 Vocalizations can mediate same-sex
“love” in male Java sparrows Masayo Soma
Department of Biology, School of Science,
Hokkaido University, N10 W8, Kita-ku,
Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan Phone: +81-11-706-2995
Email: masayo.soma@sci.hokudai.ac.jp
48
Call variablity relates to body
condition during nightly recordings of the frog Batrachyla taeniata
Matías I. Muñoz
Program of Physiology and Biophysics,
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Independencia,
8380453, Santiago, Chile
Phone: +56-2-229786204 Email: munozsandoval@ug.uchile.cl
49 Transformation of a Canary finch singing as a result of domestication
Roman Skibnevskiy
Trubnaya st, 25-2-35, 127051 Russia, Moscow,
Russia Email: kenarfond@gmail.com
50 Species recognition in Great spotted woodpeckers (Dendrocopos major):
A multilevel perception system
Maxime Garcia
NEURO-PSI, CNRS UMR 9197, Université
Lyon/Saint-Etienne,42023 Saint-Etienne,
France Email: maxime.garcia@ymail.com
51 Functions of duets and chorus in
Chubb’s cisticola Michal Budka
Department of Behavioural Ecology
Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań,
Poland Email: m.budka@amu.edu.pl
52
Species richness (of insects) drives
the use of acoustic space in the
tropics
Mitchell Aide
Department of Biology, University of Puerto
Rico, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Email: tmaide@yahoo.com
5
53
A quantitative description of the
vocal repertoire of wild Heaviside’s dolphins (Cephalorhynchus
heavisidii)
Morgan Martin
Department of Zoology and Entomology,
University of Pretoria, Hatfield, South Africa
Email: mjmartin@sandiego.edu
54
Characterization of vocal repertoire
of Common myna (Acridotheres tristis)
Nakul Raj/
Yambem Soniya
Centre for Animal Sciences, Central University
of Punjab, Bhathinda 151001, India Email: nakul.sci48@gmail.com
55
Relationship between song
repertoire size with nesting success,
territory size and territorial conflict in Pied bush chat (Saxicola
caprata)
Navjeevan Dadwal/
Dinesh Bhatt
Department of Zoology and Environmental Science, Gurukula Kangri University,
Haridwar, Uttarakhand, India
Email: navjeevan.dadwal@gmail.com
56
Does a rival’s song elicit territorial
defense in a tropical songbird, the
Pied bush chat (Saxicola caprata)?
Navjeevan
Dadwal
Department of Zoology and Environmental Science, Gurukula Kangri University,
Haridwar, Uttarakhand, India
Email: navjeevan.dadwal@gmail.com
57
Song characteristics of White-rumped shama Copsychus
malabaricus (Scopoli, 1788) in
nature and as a cage-bird
Novia
Rahmawaty
Department of Biology, Faculty Mathematics and Natural Sciences, Andalas University,
Padang, Indonesia
Email: novialr02@gmail.com
58
Song type persistence over time differs between fragmented and
unfragmented populations of
Ortolan bunting (Emberiza hortulana)
Paweł Szymański
Department of Behavioural Ecology, Adam
Mickiewicz University, Umultowska 89, 61-616 Poznań, Poland
Email: paweelszymanski@gmail.com
59
Does coordination matter?
Responses to duets varying in
temporal coordination in a territorial bird
Pedro Diniz Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade de Brasília, Brasília, DF 70910-900, Brazil
Email: pdadiniz@gmail.com
60
Differences in the morphology and
acoustics between a new species of Teleogryllus and a sympatric
congeneric and a cryptic congeneric
species from India
Ranjana Jaiswara
Department of Zoology and Environmental
Sciences, Punjabi University, Patiala, Punjab,
India
Email: ranjana.jaiswara@gmail.com
61
Development of Zebrafish under noise conditions: Insights into the
natural soundscape and noise
effects
Rafael A. Lara
Institute of Science and Envir., University of Saint Joseph, Macau S.A.R., China
Phone: (+853) 8796 4400
Email: 201600312@usj.edu.mo.
62a
A new venue to support regional collaboration and networking in
bioacoustics research and marine
mammal conservation in Latin America (LAMLA)
Renata Sousa-Lima
Departamento de Fisiologia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Avenida
Senador Salgado Filho, 3000, Bairro Lagoa
Nova, Natal, RN, 59078-970, Brazil Email: sousalima.renata@gmail.com
62b
Acoustic communication in
Neoperena villosa (Hymenoptera, Formicidae, Ponerinae)
Jeniffer da
Câmara
Medeiros/ Renata Sousa-
Lima
Programa de Pós-graduação em Psicobiologia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte,
Brazil Email: sousalima.renata@gmail.com
63
Acoustic signalling in different behavioural context with special
reference to aggressive behaviour in
Acanthogryllus asiaticus
Richa Singh
Department of Biological Sciences,Indian Institute of Science Education and Research,
Mohali, India
Email: richas510@gmail.com
64 Ontogenesis of vocal signals in two brood parasite species Common and
Oriental cuckoo
Irina Beme Faculty of Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia
Email: irbeme@mail.ru
65
Understanding the origin of
introductory vocalizations in song bird, the Zebra finch
Shikha Kalra
Indian Institute of Science Education and
Research, Dr. Homi Bhabha road, Pashan, Pune
India
6
Email: shikha.kalra@students.iiserpune.ac.in
66
Examining repertoire size and
sexual dimorphism in vocalization of Purple sunbird (Cinnyris
asiaticus)
Sonam Chorol
Department of Biological Sciences
Indian Institute of Science Education and Research, Mohali, 140306, India
Email: sonamchorol75@gmail.com
67 The acoustic system of House crow
(Corvus splendens) Tanya Singh
P.G. Dept. of Zoology, Jamshedpur Co- operative College, Jamshedpur-831001, India
Email: kksharma.jsr@gmail.com
68
Variation in trill characteristics in
Tree pipit songs: Different trills for different use?
Tereza
Petrusková
Department of Ecology, Charles University,
Prague, CZ-12844, Czech Republic
Email: kumstatova@post.cz
69
How do bats deal with clutter? A case of vocal gymnast and clutter
rejection strategy by Molossops
temminckii in Brazil
Thiago Oliveira
Universidade de Brasília (UnB), Instituto de
Biologia, Departamento de Zoologia,
(Programa de Pós Graduação em Zoologia), Campus Darcy Ribeiro, Brasília, DF, Brazil
Email: ludmillaaguiar@unb.br
70
Neither too much, nor too less: Data-mining an avian community
through long-term soundscape
recording and rapid assessment
survey
Tomás Honaiser
Rostirolla
Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina
(UFSC), Brazil
Email: onaiser@gmail.com
71
Acoustic divergence of mating calls
in two cryptic sibling bat species
(Myotis myotis and M. blythii): Cause or consequence of
speciation?
Tomasz Postawa
Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences in
Cracow, Poland
Email: tpostawa@gmail.com
72 Does inter-syllable interval affect
syllable perception in a songbird?
Tomoko
Mizuhara
Department of Life Sciences, Graduate School
of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Meguro, Tokyo, Japan
Email:
mizuhara-tomoko677@g.ecc.u-tokyo.ac.jp
73
Factors affecting nocturnal
signalling behaviour in the Bladder grasshopper (Bullacris unicolor)
Vanessa
Couldridge
Department of Biodiversity and Conservation Biology, University of the Western Cape,
Bellville, South Africa
Email: vcouldridge@uwc.ac.za
74 Vibration and acoustic sensation of
spider to capture prey
Vijay
Kumar/Amit
Kamboj/ Naveen
Kumar
School of Mechanical, Materials and Energy
Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology,
Ropar, Nangal Road, Rupnagar, Punjab, India
Email: nkumar@iitrpr.ac.in
75
Dawn chorus helps the Indian chat
(Cercomela fusca) to mediate social
relationships with neighbouring males in announcing the established
territory
Vinaya Kumar
Sethi
Faculty of Modern Studies, Uttarakhand
Sanskrit University, Haridwar, India Email: vksethi@usvv.ac.in
76
Pattern of song sharing for the
Martens’s warbler
(Seicercus omeiensis)
Yulia Kolesnikova
Severtsov Institute of Ecology & Evolution,
Russian Academic of Science, Moscow, Russian Federation
Email: j.kolesnikova@list.ru
77
Positive and negative emotional
contagion via ultrasonic vocalizations in rat
Yumi Saito
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences,
The University of Tokyo, Japan Email: rendoll4@gmail.com
78
Stridulation in kissing bugs:
Description of the stridulatory organ and the vibratory signal of
Mepraia spinolai (Hemiptera:
Reduviidae)
Matías I. Muñoz
Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of
Medicine, University of Chile, Independencia,
8380453Santiago, Chile
Email: munozsandoval@ug.uchile.cl
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