Anton Baotic
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antonbaotic.bsky.social
Anton Baotic
@antonbaotic.bsky.social
A great summary of our two recent 🦁 lion and 🐦 oxpecker playback studies on how giraffes use acoustic cues from these two species to stay alert - beautifully written by the @oeaw.bsky.social team.

www.oeaw.ac.at/en/news/gira...
#bioacoustics #animalbehaviour #giraffe
Giraffes use Birds as an Alarm System
Acoustic researchers from the Austrian Academy of Sciences (OeAW) have shown through field studies in South Africa that giraffes can learn to correctly interpret the alarm calls of other animals.
www.oeaw.ac.at
November 6, 2025 at 4:12 PM
Reposted by Anton Baotic
Giraffen haben einen Vogel. Und zwar als Alarmanlage. 🐦🦒
Ein Team um @antonbaotic.bsky.social zeigt: Nur Giraffen, die mit Löwen leben, verstehen die Warnrufe des Rotschnabel-Madenhackers richtig. Wo Raubtiere fehlen, geht das Wissen verloren, eine „ökologische Amnesie“. tinyurl.com/y5b4sda8
Giraffen haben einen Vogel – und zwar als Alarmanlage
Schallforscher:innen der ÖAW zeigen anhand von Feldforschungen in Südafrika, dass Giraffen lernen können, Warnrufe anderer Tiere richtig zu deuten.
tinyurl.com
November 6, 2025 at 8:40 AM
Exciting PhD program at @ituaustria.bsky.social: “Acoustics, Analysis and AI.”, bridging sound, math, and machine learning with projects from spatial hearing models to bioacoustics - in collaboration with @isf-oeaw.bsky.social/@oeaw.bsky.social
Deadline: 31 Jan 2026.
🔗 career.it-u.at/en/Job/73280
PhD Student
career.it-u.at
November 5, 2025 at 9:11 AM
🦒Giraffes don’t just know predators - they learn them.
Our new paper in Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution shows that vigilance to lion roars is shaped by evolved sensitivity and ecological experience.
🔗 doi.org/10.3389/fevo...
@isf-oeaw.bsky.social
#bioacoustics #giraffes #animalbehaviour #ecology
Frontiers | Learning to fear: predator recognition in giraffes is shaped by evolved sensitivity and ecological experience
IntroductionPredator recognition is essential for prey survival, yet, whether responses are shaped by evolutionary predispositions or by ecological experienc...
doi.org
November 3, 2025 at 5:13 PM
Reposted by Anton Baotic
Do you have hours of videos📹with animals? Speed up your watching by using BEHAVE - a user-friendly, open-source, free, zero-install tool for coding animal behaviour in video recordings!
Try BEHAVE here: behave.claude-apps.com

Read more: sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
April 9, 2025 at 10:47 AM
Reposted by Anton Baotic
I really resonate with this paper!Working on charismatic species is inspiring but challenging.Competition often overshadows collaboration. I understand the dilemma, as everyone tries to survive in academia, but we need more openness and support.
doi.org/10.1002/pan3...
@britishecologicalsociety.org
Research monopolization in the biological sciences: Charismatic species are partly to blame
Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.
doi.org
October 27, 2025 at 7:58 PM
Reposted by Anton Baotic
Mongabay is hiring! 🌎

Join our global newsroom:
🌊 Contributing Editor (Oceans)
📣 Engagement Editor
📰 Wire Reporter (Asia)
All remote + full-time.

Apply now to tell the stories shaping our planet! Relevant links in comments 👇
October 23, 2025 at 3:35 PM
Reposted by Anton Baotic
Interested in a PhD in ornithology? Funding available for projects at the interface of ecology, behaviour & evolution from Oct '26 working on long-term population studies of tits at Wytham, based in @biology.ox.ac.uk in the new Life & Mind Building in Oxford
www.findaphd.com/phds/project...
October 20, 2025 at 7:44 PM
Reposted by Anton Baotic
📢 Open PhD position at our Institute: Bioacoustics / cheetah vocal communication 🐆🎶
You’ll study the cheetah’s high-pitched “chirps” that sound surprisingly like birds 🐦— exploring their acoustic structure and function. 👉 Details and application: www.oeaw.ac.at/jobs?jh=34u4...
October 20, 2025 at 12:52 PM
Happy World Okapi Day! 🦒🌿
Meet the okapi - the giraffe’s only living relative. Hidden deep in Congo’s rainforests, this elusive “forest giraffe” remains one of the least-known large mammals. Protecting okapis means protecting Congo’s forests.
October 18, 2025 at 7:45 AM
Our new paper is out in BMC Biology!
We show that predator experience enhances giraffe responses to oxpecker alarm calls.
Giraffes living with lions were more vigilant than those from predator-free landscapes - experience shapes awareness across species. 🦒🦁🚨

doi.org/10.1186/s129...
Predator experience enhances giraffe vigilance to oxpecker alarm calls - BMC Biology
Background Animals often benefit from the alarm calls of other species to detect danger, but how such cues are integrated into vigilance strategies remains unclear. Giraffes (Giraffa spp.) rely on early threat detection to avoid ambush and are known hosts of red-billed oxpeckers (Buphagus erythrorhynchus), which form mutualistic associations with large mammals by feeding on ectoparasites and emitting alarm calls in response to approaching threats. While these calls are thought to provide early-warning benefits, it remains unclear how giraffes interpret them, and whether their responses vary with prior exposure to predation risk. Results We conducted playback experiments across three giraffe populations differing in predator presence to test whether giraffes adjust vigilance in response to oxpecker alarm calls. Individuals in the predator-inhabited reserve maintained vigilance longer than those in predator-free areas, suggesting that prior exposure enhances responsiveness to alarm calls. Acoustic analyses revealed that oxpecker alarm calls are characterized by low harmonic-to-noise ratios, consistent with harsh, broadband signals that are known to enhance attention and urgency perception in alarm contexts. However, call structure alone did not explain vigilance responses; instead responses were modulated by ecological context, specifically whether giraffes lived in areas with or without lions. Conclusions Our findings suggest that oxpeckers serve a sentinel-like function and that giraffes use their alarm calls as early-warning signals, with stronger responses observed in populations exposed to predators. This supports the idea that eavesdropping on heterospecific alarm calls can provide context-dependent benefits, with predator-experienced giraffes showing greater sensitivity to oxpecker alarms. By linking behavioral flexibility with ecological context, this study offers a framework for understanding how mutualistic communication systems adapt to changing predation pressures.
doi.org
October 12, 2025 at 9:22 PM