Wednesday 23 January 2013

Sperm Whales Adopt Deformed Dolphin: Report

A group of sperm whales in the eastern Atlantic Ocean appear to have temporarily adopted a dolphin with a spinal deformation.

Scientists spotted the unlikely friends near the Azores Islands, an archipelago about 900 miles off the coast of Portugal.

According to a recent report in Science Magazine, two behavioral ecologists from German marine research firm Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries watched the adult bottlenose dolphin with an S-shaped spine "while it nuzzled and rubbed" against a group of sperm whales that were traveling together. The magazine notes that the sperm whales even "reciprocated" the contact.

The researchers observed this behavior seven times over an eight-day period in 2011, and they believe the relationship between the whales and the dolphin to have been a purely social alliance, per Science Mag. The researchers theorized that the dolphin's scoliosis prevented it from keeping up with its pod, or gave the dolphin "a low social status," prompting it to seek the company of the whales, according to the article.

Read the full report on Science Magazine's website.

Rare though inter-species friendships may be, this isn't the first time that dolphins befriending whales has made the news. In 2008 a bottlenose dolphin who was known for playing with humans led two beached pygmy sperm whales back to safety after apparently responding to the whales' calls for help.

In response to the incident, the BBC, citing Justin Gregg of the Dolphin Communication Project, reported that a pygmy sperm whale and dolphin "might have signals in common," which would allow them to communicate with one another. But Gregg stressed that their means of communication would have been very basic, the BBC notes.

Although dolphins are not an endangered species, the sperm whale is one of about 2,000 on the Endangered Species list and is classified as "vulnerable" by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which publishes The Red List of Threatened Species to determine risks of extinction to plants and animals around the world.

Things may get better for the sperm whale in coming years, however. The IUCN points out that, while commercial whaling caused a significant reduction in the global population of the sperm whale in the past, whaling is no longer widespread and its effects are reversible.

(h/t io9)

Also on HuffPost:

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  • In this photo taken July 21, 2011, a baby gray whale is seen with its mother in the Klamath River in Klamath, Calif.

  • Female orca Wikie swims with her calf born by artificial insemination on April 19, 2011 at Marineland animal exhibition park in the French Riviera city of Antibes, southeastern France.

  • An 8.5 metre-long juvenile humpback whale remains stranded on Anaconda beach in La Paloma, department of Rocha, in southeastern Uruguay, on January 27, 2011. AFP

  • A humpback whale is seen breaching outside of Sydney Heads at the beginning of whale watching season during a Manly Whale Watching tour on June 23, 2011 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Cameron Spencer/Getty Images)

  • The tail of a humpback whale emerges from the surface of the Pacific Ocean at the Uramba Bahia Malaga natural park in Colombia, on July 22, 2011. (LUIS ROBAYO/AFP/Getty Images)




Source : huffingtonpost[dot]com

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