Abstract
The present report describes the first study of continuous vigilance in dolphins. Two adult bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus), WEN (male) and SAY (female), maintained a very high detection rate of randomly presented, infrequent, 1.5-s target tones in a background of frequent 0.5-s equal-amplitude tones over five continuous 120-h sessions. The animals were able to maintain high levels (WEN 97, 87, 99%; SAY 93, 96%) of target detection without signs of sleep deprivation as indicated by behavior, blood indices or marked sleep rebound during 24 h of continuous post-experiment observation. Target response time overall (F=0.384; P=0.816) did not change between day 1 and day 5. However, response time was significantly slower (F=21.566, P=0.019) during the night (21.00-04.00 h) when the dolphins would have ordinarily been resting or asleep.
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Ridgway, S., Carder, D., Finneran, J., Keogh, M., Kamolnick, T., Todd, M., & Goldblatt, A. (2006). Dolphin continuous auditory vigilance for five days. Journal of Experimental Biology, 209(18), 3621–3628. https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.02405
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