New research reveals that dolphins can recognize the whistles of old "tank mates" after a separation of 20 years.This is the longest social memory recorded for any species other than humans.
The remarkable memory is another indication that dolphins have a level of cognitive ability comparable to only a few other species, including humans, chimpanzees and elephants. Dolphins' talent for social recognition may be even more long-lasting than facial recognition among humans. This is because human faces change over time but the signature whistle that identifies a dolphin remains stable over many decades.
"This shows us an animal
operating cognitively at a level that's very consistent with human social
memory," said Jason Bruck, who conducted the study and received his Ph.D.
in June 2013 from the University of Chicago's program in Comparative Human
Development. His study is published in the current issue of the Proceedings
of the Royal Society of London B.
To establish how well dolphins could
remember their former companions, Bruck collected data from 53 different
bottlenose dolphins at six facilities, including Brookfield Zoo near Chicago
and Dolphin Quest in Bermuda. The six sites were part of a breeding consortium
that has rotated dolphins and kept records on which ones lived together, going
back decades.
"This is the kind of study you
can only do with captive groups when you know how long the animals have been
apart," Bruck said. "To do a similar study in the wild would be
almost impossible."
"Signature whistles" offer
means to test memory
Other studies have
established that each dolphin develops its own unique signature whistle that
appears to function as a name. Researchers Vincent M. Janik and Stephanie L.
King at Scotland's University of St. Andrews reported earlier this year that a
wild bottlenose dolphin can learn and repeat signatures belonging to other
individuals, and answer when another dolphin mimics its unique call.
Bruck played recordings of signature
whistles to dolphins that had once lived with the animals that made the calls.
Determining whether the dolphins recognized their old companions required a comparison of how they responded to familiar calls versus calls
belonging to dolphins they had never met.
Bruck would play recording
after recording of signature whistles that the target dolphins had never heard
before. His initial studies showed that these "dolphins get bored quickly
listening to signature whistles from dolphins they don't know." Once they
were habituated to the unfamiliar calls, Bruck would play a recording of an
animal that he knew the target dolphin had lived with.
The familiar calls often would perk
up the dolphins and elicit an immediate response.
"When they hear a dolphin they
know, they often quickly approach the speaker playing the recording,"
Bruck said. "At times they will hover around, whistle at it, try to get it
to whistle back."
To check that the response was the
result of recognition, Bruck also would play a test recording of an unfamiliar
bottlenose that was the same age and sex as the familiar animal. All the
behavior was scored according to how quickly and to what degree the animals
responded.
A clear pattern emerged in the data:
Compared with unfamiliar calls, dolphins responded significantly more to
whistles from animals they once knew, even if they had not heard the calls in
decades.
goedenquotes.blogspot.com
underwaterinternet.blogspot.com
goedenscience.blogspot.com
goedenshark.blogspot.com
goedensnews.blogspot.com
gerrygoeden.blogspot.com
geraldgoeden.blogspot.com
goedenspress.blogspot.com
einsteinsnature.blogspot.com
youngmarinescientist.blogspot.com
gerryquotes.blogspot.com
goedenmarineecology.blogspot.com
underwaterinternet.blogspot.com
goedenscience.blogspot.com
goedenshark.blogspot.com
goedensnews.blogspot.com
gerrygoeden.blogspot.com
geraldgoeden.blogspot.com
goedenspress.blogspot.com
einsteinsnature.blogspot.com
youngmarinescientist.blogspot.com
gerryquotes.blogspot.com
goedenmarineecology.blogspot.com
No comments:
Post a Comment