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Heptuna and Biosonar
Murchison, A. E. (1976). Range resolution by an echolocating bottlenosed dolphin (Tursiops truncatus). The Journal of the Acoustical Society of Amer- ica 60(S1), S5.
Murchison, A. E. (1980). Detection range and range resolution of echolocating bottlenose porpoise (Tursiops truncatus). In R.-G. Busnel and R. H. Penner (Eds.), Animal Sonar Systems. Plenum Press, New York, pp. 43-70.
Norris, K. S. (1968). The evolution of acoustic mechanisms in odontocete cetaceans. In E. T. Drake (Ed.), Evolution and Environment. Yale University Press, New Haven, CT, pp. 297-324.
Renaud, D. L., and Popper, A. N. (1975). Sound localization by the bottle- nose porpoise Tursiops truncatus. Journal of Experimental Biology 63(3), 569-585.
Ridgway, S. H., and Carder, D. A. (1993). High‐frequency hearing loss in old (25+ years old) male dolphins. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 94(3), 1830.
Ridgway, S. H., and Carder, D. A. (1997). Hearing deficits measured in some Tursiops truncatus, and discovery of a deaf/mute dolphin. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 101(1), 590-594.
Schusterman, R. J., Kersting, D. A., and Au, W. W. L. (1980). Stimulus control of echolocation pulses in Tursiops truncatus. In R.-G. Busnel and J. F. Fish (Eds.), Animal Sonar Systems. Springer US, Boston, MA, pp. 981-982.
Wahlberg, M., and Au, W. (2018). Obituary | Bertel Møhl. Acoustics Today 14(1), 75.
BioSketches
  Patrick W. Moore retired from the US Navy Marine Mammal Program after 42 years of federal service. He was an active scientist as well as a senior manager of the program. Patrick received the Navy Meritorious Civilian Service Award in1992 and again in 2000 for contribu-
 tions and leadership in animal psychophysics and neural network models. He is a fellow of the Acoustical Society of America, a charter member of the Society for Marine Mam- malogy, and a member of the American Behavior Society and coedited Animal Sonar: Processes and Performance. Pat- rick is currently a senior life scientist at the National Marine Mammal Foundation.
Arthur N. Popper is professor emeri- tus and research professor at the Uni- versity of Maryland, College Park, MD. He is also editor of Acoustics Today and the Springer Handbook of Auditory Re- search series. His research focused on hearing by aquatic animals (mostly fish-
es) as well as on the evolution of vertebrate hearing. For the past 20 years, he has worked on issues related to the effects of anthropogenic sound marine life both in terms of his re- search and in dealing with policy issues (e.g., development of criteria).
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