Sanvito,S. & Galimberti,F. 2000. Bioacoustics of southern elephant seals. II. Individual and geographical variation in male aggressive vocalizations. Bioacoustics. 11: 287-307. Abstract In traditional studies of animal communication individual variability was sometimes considered less relevant than species specific aspects, mostly because the goal was the classifications of sounds in repertories. On the other side, individual variability seems to have a significant role in signal function and evolution. In this paper, we analyze individual variation of structure of aggressive vocalizations of male southern elephant seals, and we compare sounds from our main study population, Sea Lion Island (Falkland Islands), with sounds recorded in the nearby population of the Valdes Peninsula (Patagonia, Argentina). We firstly analyzed repeatability of acoustic parameters at vocalization and male level. Repeatability of bouts of the same vocalization was extremely high, and this confirmed that vocalization is the fundamental level of organization of male acoustic communication in this species. Also repeatability of vocalizations of individual males was very high, and hence sounds may effectively convey information about identity of the individual who emits the sound. Male aggressive vocalizations were classified in a small number of types, and each male emitted always the same type of vocalization. We compared the typology of sounds emitted by Sea Lion Island males with vocalizations by Valdes Peninsula males, and we found striking differences. None of the sound types was shared by the two populations, and, although similar in fundamental acoustics, sounds from the two populations had different macrostructure. We conclude that these two populations present dialects in male acoustic communication, although scarcity of recordings from other populations limit the scope of this conclusion.