Signature whistle
Each dolphin develops a unique whistle in its first year - its 'name' - which it retains for life.
Marine Biology
Every bottlenose dolphin alive has a personal name - a unique whistle pattern it created for itself, that other dolphins use to address it individually. Dolphins communicate with clicking, whistling, physical contact, and body language simultaneously. Could they have something approaching language? Picture a social species that communicates through a private radio frequency that only your pod can hear, uses sonar to paint 3D pictures of the seafloor for your companions, and calls each member by a personal name it chose for itself.
Dolphins communicate through three main channels: vocalization, echolocation clicks, and non-vocal behavior. Vocal communication uses whistles (for social bonding and individual identity), burst-pulse sounds (rapid click trains perceived as continuous sound, used in social situations and possibly emotional expression), and other vocalizations. Each dolphin develops a unique 'signature whistle' that functions as a personal identifier - other dolphins recognize and copy it to address that individual. Clicks serve double duty: low repetition rates allow echolocation; very rapid burst pulses (over 200 per second) appear to be social communication signals. Non-vocal channels include touch, body posture, and surface behaviors.

Signature whistle
Each dolphin develops a unique whistle in its first year - its 'name' - which it retains for life.
Echolocation sharing
Dolphins can 'listen in' on each other's echolocation clicks, potentially sharing acoustic images.
Burst-pulse sounds
Rapid click trains exceeding 200 per second - associated with excitement, aggression, and play.
Myth: Scientists have decoded dolphin language
No dolphin 'dictionary' exists. The full semantic content of their communication remains unknown.
Myth: Dolphins only communicate underwater
They also communicate at the surface through breaching, tail-slapping, and physical contact.
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