quote:
Originally posted by dance girl:
Can we have a clue?
Need a
clue? Honestly ! And you are someone who cares about
meriones unguiculatus?[Note: fanciers translate the Latin as 'clawed warrior' It isn't . Meriones was a charioteer of Idomeneus, who piloted his ships from Crete to Troy ; Ovid's Metamorphoses, book 13 at line 359;and the second word means 'having fingernails'. So it's 'like a charioteer cum sailor with long fingernails'. Hmm
fancy!

]
But I digress.Just think back to November. Mongolian gerbil fanciers were in for a treat. I must confess that, at the time, I was engrossed in "
Why humpback whales learn songs: Courting or ranging?" in the same volume,when my eye was distracted by the paper on p2947 of vol 122, November. "
A vowel identification procedure for gerbils" by Sinnott and Mostellor was there in the mag., the
Journal of the Acoustical Society of America You can find the abstract and the whole text free by going to the Society's website,going to the link below, then to vol 122 and scrolling down to 'bioacoustics' where the articles are listed by page number.[The abstract says that the paper will be illustrated with a video, but I'm not sure how much excitement or disappointment you can face ] Anyway, they found by experiments involving bowls of food and making noises at gerbils that, inter alia, Mongolian gerbils can distinguish between 'u' and 'i' and , more subtly, between the sound of 'ae' and 'a'. Haven't established whether, excitingly, by 'ae' the authors mean 'ae' as in Ancient Greek, adopted into Latin, which is a distinct sound there (ignored by Americans, who write e.g. 'haemophilia'as 'hemophilia'

), so the Gerbils are truly educated, or whether the authors are, dully, referring to the phonetic alphabet.
So, make noises at, speak to, your gerbil. If it distinguishes then odds- on it's Mongolian.
You may have missed the paper from 2005, in vol 118. It's "Alarm signals of the gerbil: Acoustic variation by predator [etc]" but this may not be so relevant in the domestic environment.
Journal key