We use cookies to improve your experience, some are essential for the operation of this site.

Postdoc scholar Amy van Cise and Annie Gorgone photographing pilot whales.

Postdoc scholar Amy van Cise and Annie Gorgone photographing pilot whales.
Postdoc scholar Amy van Cise and Annie Gorgone photographing pilot whales.
Postdoc scholar Amy van Cise and Annie Gorgone photographing pilot whales.
Postdoc scholar Amy van Cise and Annie Gorgone photographing pilot whales.
Comments (0)
466138
Baird, Robin
Postdoc scholar Amy van Cise and Annie Gorgone photographing pilot whales.
Still Image
10/25/2013
2013OCT25_D17_RWB_0046.JPG
Not a WHOI image.
NMFS Permit #15530.
Image Of the Day caption:
WHOI researcher Amy Van Cise and Annie Gorgone of the Cascadia Research Collective photograph pilot whales during field work in the Hawaiian Islands. The study found that short-finned pilot whales there have their own sorts of vocal dialects, much like different human social groups do. “It’s sort of like if you’ve got hipsters and prep kids in the same high school—each group has different slang,” said Cise, a postdoc scholar in the Sensory Ecology and Bioacoustics Lab at WHOI. “They identify themselves with certain speech to maintain that separation.”
Caption from WHOI News Release dated 12/18/2018:
Researchers Amy Van Cise of WHOI and Annie Gorgone of the Cascadia Research Collective photograph pilot whales during field work in the Hawaiian Islands.
Photo by Robin Baird, Cascadia Research Collective
© Cascadia Research Collective
This is NOT a WHOI copyrighted image. Permission required from copyright holder for any other use.
Labels
This item includes these files
Collections