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Posts Tagged ‘sperm whale’

Photo: Gabriel Barathieu/Wikimedia.
This is a picture of a mother and baby sperm whale off the coast of Mauritius. For some rare video footage showing the birth of a sperm whale calf near Dominica in the Caribbean, click at the Guardian, here.

Scientists made an exciting discovery in 2023 about how whales deal with the birthing process. Even more exciting, it was all captured on video. The pod of whales was well known to the researchers, who knew how they were related and had given them all names.

The article from from Agence France-Press was shared by Guardian.

“Scientists have managed to film a sperm whale giving birth while other female whales worked together to support the mother and her newborn. A team from Project Ceti, an international effort seeking to understand how whales communicate, was in a boat near a pod of 11 whales off the coast of the Caribbean island of Dominica on 8 July 2023.

“A 19-year-old female named Rounder was surrounded by family members and others as she was about to give birth to her second calf.

“Over nearly five and a half hours, the scientists documented the group’s behavior, watching them from the boat, filming them with drones and recording the sounds underneath the waves. The data they collected, which was published [in March] in the journals Scientific Reports and Science, represents an exceptional rarity in the history of science.

“Out of 93 species of cetaceans – a group that includes whales, dolphins and porpoises – only nine have ever been observed giving birth in the wild. Rarer still was that whales not related to the mother were helping out.

“The Project Ceti team member Shane Gero told the New Scientist: “This is the first evidence of birth assistance in non-primates. It is fascinating to see the intergenerational support from the grandmother to her labouring daughter, and the support from the other, unrelated females.”

“The birth lasted 34 minutes, from their tails emerging from the water to the calf being born. During labor, other adult females dived under Rounder’s dorsal fin. …

“Immediately after the birth, the pod’s behavior ‘rapidly changed’ as every member became active, according to the study in Scientific Reports. All the adults were ‘squeezing the newborn’s body between theirs, touching it with their heads,’ the researchers wrote. The whales pointed their noses towards the newborn, ‘pushing it around, under the water, and on to and across their bodies above the surface.’ …

“Whale calves are born tail-first, rather than head-first like other mammals. However, while newborn sperm whales become talented swimmers within a few hours, they still sink right after birth. So other whales have to lift the calf up ‘to prevent the newborn from sinking while also facilitating its first breaths,’ the researchers suggested. Primates – including humans – are the only other mammals known to help assist each other out during birth.

“The scientists also recorded the whales making many sounds, including significant changes in ‘vocal style’ during significant events, the study said. … The changes in vocalization suggested that the group was coordinating to support the birth – or protect the newborn, the researchers said. …

“As they grow, the young become the center of their pod’s social unit, with others helping out with babysitting while the mother searches for food.

“After the birth was filmed in 2023, the pod was not spotted again for more than a year. Then the newborn was spotted with Accra and Aurora – the other young members of the pod – on 25 July last year. Surviving its first year was a good sign that the sperm whale would reach adulthood, the Project Ceti team said.

More at the Guardian, here. No paywall.

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Photo: New England Aquarium.
Endangered sperm whales — an adult and calf sighted in the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument in October 2023.

This is the time of year that people like to go on whale watches. Responsible tour operators know that it’s vitally important not to stress out the whales. But what a thrill it is to see even one! And that can keep people engaged in their welfare.

Meanwhile, scientists are always trying to understand more about them. Consider the new research on sperm whales’ “phonetic alphabet.”

Will Dunham of Reuters wrote at US News and World Report, “The various species of whales inhabiting Earth’s oceans employ different types of vocalizations to communicate. Sperm whales, the largest of the toothed whales, communicate using bursts of clicking noises — called codas — sounding a bit like Morse code.

“A new analysis of years of vocalizations by sperm whales in the eastern Caribbean has found that their system of communication is more sophisticated than previously known, exhibiting a complex internal structure replete with a ‘phonetic alphabet.’ The researchers identified similarities to aspects of other animal communication systems — and even human language.

“Like all marine mammals, sperm whales are very social animals, with their calls an integral part of this. The new study has provided a fuller understanding of how these whales communicate.

” ‘The research shows that the expressivity of sperm whale calls is much larger than previously thought,’ said Pratyusha Sharma, a Massachusetts Institute of Technology doctoral student in robotics and machine learning and lead author of the study published [in May] in the journal Nature Communications.

” ‘We do not know yet what they are saying. We are studying the calls in their behavioral contexts next to understand what sperm whales might be communicating about,’ said Sharma.

“Sperm whales, which can reach about 60 feet (18 meters) long, have the largest brain of any animal. They are deep divers, feeding on giant squid and other prey.

“The researchers are part of the Project CETI (Cetacean Translation Initiative) Machine Learning Team. Using traditional statistical analysis and artificial intelligence, they examined calls made by about 60 whales recorded by the Dominica Sperm Whale Project, a research program that has assembled a large dataset on the species.

” ‘Why are they exchanging these codas? What information might they be sharing?’ asked study co-author Shane Gero, Project CETI’s lead biologist and Dominica Sperm Whale Project founder, also affiliated with Carleton University in Canada.

” ‘I think it’s likely that they use codas to coordinate as a family, organize babysitting, foraging and defense,’ Gero said.

” ‘All of these different codas that we see are actually built by combining a comparatively simple set of smaller pieces,’ said study co-author Jacob Andreas, an MIT computer science professor and Project CETI member. …

“For people, Sharma said, ‘There are two levels of combination.’ The lower level is sounds to words. The higher level is words to sentences.

“Sperm whales, Sharma said, also use a two-level combination of features to form codas, and codas are then sequenced together as the whales communicate. The lower level has similarities to letters in an alphabet, Sharma said. …

” ‘Human language is unique in many ways, yes,’ Gero said. ‘But I suspect we will find many patterns, structures and aspects thought to be unique to humans in other species, including whales, as science progresses — and perhaps also features and aspects of animal communications which humans do not possess.’

“If scientists can decipher the meaning of what the sperm whales are ‘saying,’ should people try to communicate with them?

” ‘I think there’s a lot more research that we have to do before we know whether it’s a good idea to try to communicate with them, or really even to have a sense of whether that will be possible,’ Andreas said.”

More at US News and World Report, here. See also the Smithsonian.

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