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Dive into the research topics where Vera A. Matrosova is active.

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Featured researches published by Vera A. Matrosova.


Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology | 2007

Pups crying bass: vocal adaptation for avoidance of age-dependent predation risk in ground squirrels?

Vera A. Matrosova; Ilya A. Volodin; Elena V. Volodina; Andrey F. Babitsky

In most mammals, larger adult body size correlates with lower fundamental frequency and more closely spaced formants in vocalizations relative to juveniles. In alarm whistles of two free-living rodents, the speckled ground squirrel Spermophilus suslicus and yellow ground squirrel S. fulvus, these cues to body size were absent despite prominent differences in body weight and skull and larynx sizes between juveniles and adults. No significant correlations were found between the individual maximum fundamental frequency and body weight, both within age classes and for pooled samples of all animals within species. Furthermore, the mean alarm whistle maximum fundamental frequencies did not differ significantly between age classes (juvenile versus adult) in the speckled squirrel and were even significantly lower in juvenile yellow squirrels. We discuss the hypothesis that the obfuscation of vocal differences between juvenile and adult squirrels may represent a special adaptation of pup vocal behaviour—a form of “vocal mimicry,” resulting in imitation of adult vocal pattern to avoid infanticide and age-dependent predation risk.


Naturwissenschaften | 2011

The potential to encode sex, age, and individual identity in the alarm calls of three species of Marmotinae

Vera A. Matrosova; Daniel T. Blumstein; Ilya A. Volodin; Elena V. Volodina

In addition to encoding referential information and information about the sender’s motivation, mammalian alarm calls may encode information about other attributes of the sender, providing the potential for recognition among kin, mates, and neighbors. Here, we examined 96 speckled ground squirrels (Spermophilus suslicus), 100 yellow ground squirrels (Spermophilus fulvus) and 85 yellow-bellied marmots (Marmota flaviventris) to determine whether their alarm calls differed between species in their ability to encode information about the caller’s sex, age, and identity. Alarm calls were elicited by approaching individually identified animals in live-traps. We assume this experimental design modeled a naturally occurring predatory event, when receivers should acquire information about attributes of a caller from a single bout of alarm calls. In each species, variation that allows identification of the caller’s identity was greater than variation allowing identification of age or sex. We discuss these results in relation to each species’ biology and sociality.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2009

Short-Term and Long-Term Individuality in Speckled Ground Squirrel Alarm Calls

Vera A. Matrosova; Ilya A. Volodin; Elena V. Volodina

Abstract Apart from the alerting function of alarm calls, selection may favor cues that help individuals to distinguish between reliable and unreliable callers. However, this mechanism for selective response to real and false alarms may act only if the individual characteristics of the call are stable at least for some time. Here we test this implicit assumption for the callers reliability hypothesis, studying individuality of alarm calls in a colony of free-living, individually marked speckled ground squirrels (Spermophilus suslicus). We recorded each of 20 study animals 4 times during repeated captures when calling from a live trap toward a human, with spans of 1 day, 2 weeks, and 1 year from the 1st capture. Ten alarm call notes per animal per capture were analyzed. Individual alarm call notes showed high similarity within captures but differed strongly between captures. Both multivariate analysis of variance and discriminant function analysis showed that vocal individuality decreased rapidly with an increase of the time span between recordings. However, vocal individuality always remained higher than expected random value. Examination of our data suggests that alarm calls are unstable, which contradicts the caller reliability hypothesis, because its implicit assumption of stable individual identity is not fulfilled. However, short-term stability still may be sufficient to ensure short-term individual recognition between kin and neighbors. Also, even if the alarm calls change structurally, because group members meet up daily, they can update their knowledge of the call structure of individuals, and this would likely allow them to distinguish between reliable and unreliable individuals.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2010

Between-year stability of individual alarm calls in the yellow ground squirrel Spermophilus fulvus

Vera A. Matrosova; Ilya A. Volodin; Elena V. Volodina; Nina A. Vasilieva; Alexandra A. Kochetkova

Abstract Although individuality in alarm calls has been reported for many ground-dwelling sciurids, the degree to which the vocal identity encoded in alarm calls is stable with time has been studied only for a single sciurid species. Thus, no comparable data are available. We examined the retention of the vocal keys to individual identity after hibernation in a natural colony of yellow ground squirrels (Spermophilus fulvus), long-lived, obligate-hibernating rodents that maintain stable social groups for years. We recorded alarm calls in 2 subsequent years, separated by hibernation, from 22 individually marked animals. All individuals could be distinguished with high probability by their alarm calls within a year. However, only 6 of the 22 animals kept their alarm calls stable after hibernation. Sex, age, year of data collection, and the distance that individuals moved between years did not have significant effects on the retention of a stable alarm call structure after hibernation. Given the low proportion of individuals with stable alarm calls, vocal identity cannot be the only modality sufficient to secure the recovery of personalized social relationships after hibernation in the yellow ground squirrel.


Bioacoustics-the International Journal of Animal Sound and Its Recording | 2011

AN UNUSUAL EFFECT OF MATURATION ON THE ALARM CALL FUNDAMENTAL FREQUENCY IN TWO SPECIES OF GROUND SQUIRRELS

Elena V. Volodina; Vera A. Matrosova; Ilya A. Volodin

ABSTRACT In most mammals, adults produce relatively low frequency vocalizations compared to those of juveniles. This rule is not maintained however at least in four species of ground squirrels, whose juveniles call at the adults fundamental frequency. These findings have been obtained however with separate sets of juveniles and adults and no data is available concerning the ontogeny linked to these differences. Here we analyze the acoustic structure of alarm calls of the same Yellow Spermophilus fulvus and Speckled S. suslicus ground squirrel individuals, recorded as pups and as adults after hibernation. We found the fundamental frequencies of adults within the same frequency ranges as those of pups, in spite of the significant difference in body mass. In ground squirrels, severing the relationship between body size and call frequency removes some vocal cues to age. We discuss some functional hypotheses advanced to explain manipulations with fundamental frequencies in ground squirrels and other animals, and suggest the lack of data for discussing the mechanisms of such vocal tuning.


Naturwissenschaften | 2010

Stability of acoustic individuality in the alarm calls of wild yellow ground squirrels Spermophilus fulvus and contrasting calls from trapped and free-ranging callers.

Vera A. Matrosova; Ilya A. Volodin; Elena V. Volodina; Nina A. Vasilieva

The questions of individuality and stability of cues to identity in vocal signals are of considerable importance from theoretical and conservation perspectives. While individuality in alarm calls has been reported for many sciurids, it is not well-documented that the vocal identity encoded in the alarm calls is stable between different encounters with predators. Previous studies of two obligate hibernating rodents, speckled ground squirrels Spermophilus suslicus, and yellow ground squirrels Spermophilus fulvus demonstrated that, after hibernation, most individuals could not be identified reliably by their alarm calls. Moreover, in most speckled ground squirrels, individual patterns of alarm calls changed progressively over as little as 2xa0weeks. However, these previous data have been obtained using the collection of alarm calls from trapped animals. Here, we examined ten free-ranging dye-marked yellow ground squirrels to determine whether their alarm calls retain the cues to individuality between two encounters of surrogate predators (humans), separated on average by 3xa0days. Discriminant function analysis showed that the alarm calls of individual yellow ground squirrels were very similar within a recording session, providing very high individual distinctiveness. However, in six of the ten animals, the alarm calls were unstable between recording sessions. Also, we examined ten dye-marked individuals for consistency of acoustic characteristics of their alarm calls between the encounters of humans, differing in techniques of call collection, from free-ranging vs trapped animals. We found differences only in two variables, both related to sound degradation in the environment. Data are discussed in relation to hypotheses explaining the adaptive utility of acoustic individuality in alarm calls.


Acta Ethologica | 2015

Sex and age-class differences in calls of Iberian red deer during the rut: reversed sex dimorphism of pitch and contrasting roars from farmed and wild stags

Ilya A. Volodin; Vera A. Matrosova; Elena V. Volodina; Andrés J. García; Laureano Gallego; Rafael Márquez; Diego Llusia; Juan F. Beltrán; Tomás Landete-Castillejos

Stag rutting calls differ among subspecies of red deer Cervus elaphus. Studying sex-, age-, and subspecies-related vocal variation may highlight the forces driving this evolution. This study presents the first bioacoustical comparison of oral calls produced during the rut by Iberian red deer Cervus elaphus hispanicus stags, hinds and calves and compares the acoustics of nasal and oral calls of hinds and calves. Also, it provides the first comparison of rutting roars between farmed and wild stags. Call maximum and mean fundamental frequencies (f0max and f0mean) were higher in farmed than in wild stags. Moreover, hinds had lower f0max and f0mean compared with both farmed and wild stags. The call minimum fundamental frequency (f0min) was indistinguishable between all groups of adults, irrespective of sex, farming and nasal versus oral vocal emission. In calves, but not in hinds, oral calls had higher f0max and f0mean compared with nasal calls. The higher fundamental frequencies in farmed as compared with wild stags may have resulted from emotional arousal due to human presence at recordings or from the higher body conditions of stags reared under a farm. The comparison of our results with previously published data on various subspecies of red deer suggests that there are different pathways of vocal ontogeny in eastern and western branches of Cervus elaphus and that the acoustics of stag and hind calls are more similar within the various subspecies than they are among the subspecies.


Bioacoustics-the International Journal of Animal Sound and Its Recording | 2009

THE TECHNIQUE OF NONINVASIVE DISTANT SEXING FOR FOUR MONOMORPHIC DENDROCYGNA WHISTLING DUCK SPECIES BY THEIR LOUD WHISTLES

Ilya A. Volodin; Martin Kaiser; Vera A. Matrosova; Elena V. Volodina; Anna V. Klenova; Olga A. Filatova; M. V. Kholodova

ABSTRACT Here we present an acoustic approach for reliable sexing in four whistling duck species from the genus Dendrocygna and compare it with molecular and cloacal inspection techniques. In the four examined species, the White-faced Whistling Duck D. viduata, Fulvous Whistling Duck D. bicolor, Cuban Whistling Duck D. arborea and Red-billed Whistling Duck D. autumnalis, sexes are indistinguishable by appearance. However all the four species show strong sexual differences in the structure of their species-specific loud whistles. For 59 examined birds, an acoustic-based sexing showed 100% accordance to the DNA PCR analysis, while the cloacal inspection showed only 89.8% accuracy. The results demonstrate that acoustic sexing represents a feasible alternative to the two traditional methods as a noninvasive tool for the distant sexing of the four whistling duck species both in captivity and in the wild.


Acta Theriologica | 2012

Species-specific and shared features in vocal repertoires of three Eurasian ground squirrels (genus Spermophilus)

Vera A. Matrosova; Irena Schneiderová; Ilya A. Volodin; Elena V. Volodina

Along to alarm calls, Eurasian ground squirrels of the genus Spermophilus also produce other call types toward potential predators and rival conspecifics. Individually identified 50 speckled (Spermophilus suslicus), 18 European (S. citellus) and 59 yellow (S. fulvus) ground squirrels were examined for interspecies differences in their vocal repertoires. A separate sample of 116 (90 adult and 26 juvenile) S. suslicus was examined for presence of ultrasound in their alarm calls. In addition, all tonal calls in all the three species were checked for presence of nonlinear phenomena. Calls were elicited by approaching animals in live-traps or near burrows; some types of vocalizations were also recorded during handling. Eight call types, three tonal and five wideband ones, were described. Vocal repertoires were remarkably similar between species, excluding the alarm calls, which were species-specific. Alarm calls with ultrasonic components were found in two individuals of S. suslicus. Concerning nonlinear phenomena, biphonation in alarm calls of S. suslicus, frequency jumps and sidebands in screams of S. citellus, frequency jumps and subharmonics in screams of S. fulvus were found. Results are discussed with literature evidence on audible and ultrasonic vocalizations in ground squirrels.


Behaviour | 2018

Old and young female voices: effects of body weight, condition and social discomfort on the vocal aging in red deer hinds ( Cervus elaphus )

Ilya A. Volodin; Olga V. Sibiryakova; Nina A. Vasilieva; Elena V. Volodina; Vera A. Matrosova; Andrés J. García; Francisco J. Pérez-Barbería; Laureano Gallego; Tomás Landete-Castillejos

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Nina A. Vasilieva

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Andrey F. Babitsky

Russian Academy of Sciences

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M. V. Kholodova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Irena Schneiderová

Charles University in Prague

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Diego Llusia

Spanish National Research Council

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