馬のいななきの仕組みを解明:歌いながら口笛を吹く現象(How horses whinny: Whistling while singing)

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2026-02-23 コペンハーゲン大学(UCPH)

コペンハーゲン大学の研究チームは、馬のいななき声の発声メカニズムを詳細に解析し、馬が「歌いながら口笛を吹く」ような独特の音を出していることを明らかにした。研究では高速度カメラや音響解析を用いて喉頭の動きを観察し、通常の声帯振動に加え、前庭ヒダ(仮声帯)が同時に振動することで複雑な倍音構造が生まれることを確認した。この二重振動により、遠距離まで届く特徴的ないななきが生成される。成果は哺乳類の発声進化や動物コミュニケーション理解に貢献し、人間の音声障害研究への応用可能性も示唆される。

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馬のいななきの高基本周波数は空気力学的ホイッスルによって生成される The high fundamental frequency in horse whinnies is generated by an aerodynamic whistle

Romain Adrien Lefèvre ∙ Lucie Barluet de Beauchesne ∙ Florent Sabarros ∙ … ∙ David Reby, ∙ William Tecumseh Fitch ∙ Élodie Floriane Briefer
Current Biology  Published:February 23, 2026
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2026.01.004

馬のいななきの仕組みを解明:歌いながら口笛を吹く現象(How horses whinny: Whistling while singing)

Highlights

  • Horses produce dual fundamental frequency vocalizations with distinct mechanisms
  • The high frequency is a whistle, produced independently of vocal fold vibration
  • Helium experiments confirm its aerodynamic origins
  • These adaptations enhance both vocal complexity and communicative potential

Summary

Understanding why the frequencies of some species’ vocalizations are far above or below those predicted by body size is key for explaining the remarkable diversity of mammalian vocal behavior. Horses, among the largest terrestrial mammals, provide a clear example of such deviation: their whinnies contain a very high fundamental frequency (>1,000 Hz) in addition to a second, lower one (∼200 Hz). While the lower fundamental frequency of whinnies is readily attributed to vocal fold (laryngeal) vibrations, the biomechanical processes underlying the production of the higher one remain unknown. Using a combination of in vivo and ex vivo data, including excised larynx experiments with helium, computed tomography (CT) scans, endoscopic examinations, and acoustic analysis of horses with recurrent laryngeal neuropathy, we provide evidence that the high fundamental frequency in horse whinnies is generated by an aerodynamic whistle mechanism within the larynx, rather than vocal fold tissue vibration. These separate laryngeal sources explain the simultaneous production of low and high fundamental frequencies in vocalizations (i.e., biphonation). Horse biphonation likely evolved to convey multiple independent messages concurrently, highlighting the role of anatomical and aerodynamic adaptations in enhancing vocal complexity across species.

生物環境工学
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