How Scientists Are Decoding Hawaiian Monk Seal Communication
scientificamerican.com
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**Kendra Pierre-Louis: **For Scientific American’s Science Quickly, I’m Kendra Pierre-Louis, in for Rachel Feltman.

With some estimates placing the number of Hawaiian monk seals left in the wild at just 1,600, the species is one of the world’s most endangered types of seals. Although scientists have studied the creatures’ biology, movements and population changes in depth, very little was known about their communication—until now.

By putting underwater recorders in a handful of important monk-seal habitats across the Hawaiian archipelago, scientists have uncovered 20 new calls.


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