Newport
Beach, CA (December 7, 2000)- A tiger's intimidating roar
has the power to paralyze the animal that hears it and that
even includes experienced human trainers. Elizabeth von
Muggenthaler, a bioacoustician from the Fauna Communications
Research Institute in North Carolina, will present her research
today at the Acoustical Society
of America meeting in Newport Beach, California. Bioacoustics
is the study of the frequency or pitch, loudness, and duration
of animal sounds to learn about an animal's behavior. At
the meeting, von Muggenthaler will discuss her work analyzing
the frequency of tiger sounds to better understand the part
of a tiger's roar that we can feel, but can't hear.
Why
study something that we can't hear?
"Humans
can only hear some of the sounds that tigers use to communicate,"
says von Muggenthaler. "Humans can hear frequencies
from 20 hertz to 20,000 hertz, but whales, elephants, rhinos,
and tigers can produce sounds below 20 hertz." This
low-pitched sound, called "infrasound," can travel
long distances permeating buildings, cutting through dense
forests, and even passing through mountains. The lower the
frequency, the farther the distance the sound can travel.
Scientists believe that infrasound is the missing link in
studying tiger communication.
In
the first study of its kind, von Muggenthaler and her colleagues
recorded every growl, hiss, chuff, and roar of twenty-four
tigers at the Carnivore Preservation Trust in Pittsboro,
North Carolina, and the Riverbanks Zoological Park in Columbia,
South Carolina. Bioacousticians found that tigers can create
sounds at about 18 hertz and when tigers roar they can create
frequencies significantly below this. "When a tiger
roars-the sound will rattle and paralyze you," says
von Muggenthaler. "Although untested, we suspect that
this is caused by the low frequencies and loudness of the
sound."
When
the researchers played back a tape of recorded tiger sounds
including audible and infrasounds, the tigers appeared to
react to these sounds. Sometimes they would roar and leap
towards the speakers and sometimes sneak away. The next
step for von Muggenthaler is to take the recorded infrasounds
to scientists who can determine whether or not tigers can
hear the infrasounds. Von Muggenthaler hopes to learn more
about tigers, protect them from extinction, and understand
the unheard, paralyzing power in their roar.