Among animals that produce vocal sounds, are adult female voices higher than those of males, as they generally are in humans?
And do the males experience a “change of voice” at puberty, as human males do?
Among animals that produce vocal sounds, are adult female voices higher than those of males, as they generally are in humans?
And do the males experience a “change of voice” at puberty, as human males do?
**Nobody **know anything about this?
It’s not really possible to generalize. In many animals, the female does not call at all, or has a completely different call. In animals in which the male is larger, the call is often deeper just due to the body size difference. I would guess, offhand, that in animals in which the female is larger, the call might very well be deeper. Where adult makes have a distinctive call, younger males may have a period during which they go from giving juvenile type calls to adult male type calls.
However, your question is much to broad to really give a good answer too.
…heh…‘broad’ …