Ahh shut up ohh ohh
They make a bark or wag their tail to say that there is a predator coming.
It growls, grunts, and cavorts. This answer is true. Believe me.
the loin is big
Yes, tree kangaroos do make sounds. They use various vocalisations in order to communicate. Depending on the species, some of these vocalisations include clicking or "fft-fft" sounds when they are excited or distressed, and hissing or soft trumpeting sounds during courtship.
Chimp, an, pan
Geckos are the only species of reptile that have the ability to vocalize. They can do this when feeling threatened or in danger, when looking for a mate, or to socialize to one another.
Yes they do. A cow in labour will have a low that sounds more strained, where as a cow that is bellering for her calf or for danger, will be not as strained but a bit more higher-pitched (kind of panic-like) than if she were just lowing about being hungry or relief at finding her calf.
hell no
This question doesn't make sense. Does the writer mean, "…between (some sort of primates/humans?) and chimpanzees"?
To warn each other of danger or where a ball of fish are located. I have a film I show my class on dolphins and according to the marine biologist in the film the whistles and sounds they make does seem to make "sentences" to communicate with each other. She is trying to log the various sounds for specific functions.
Elephants make a number of sounds. They make specific sounds related to sex and danger which we can hear and understand. However, they have a much larger number of sounds which are too low in frequency (infra sound) for our ears to hear which is propagated via the elephant's legs and feet through the ground over great distances. The most common sound (that we can hear) that elephants make is called trumpeting. We can also hear them make a low rumbling noise. Examples of this can be heard by clicking on the related link.
Both male and female tokays make a various of sounds. From croaks - grunts, mating calls - alarming one another of danger. Tokay geckos have received their names due to the sounds they make. To-kek, to-kek, is the sounds people of Malaysia and Indonesia hear all year round. Thus giving their name, Tokay.