Sperm whale 'dialects' suggest cultural learning - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 19, 2024, 02:31 PM | Calgary | -4.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

Sperm whale 'dialects' suggest cultural learning

Sperm whales tend to talk like their friends and family. And a new study suggests that like human dialects, whale dialects are passed on through cultural learning.

Young whales appear to learn from adults who talk like their own social group

A new study suggests young sperm whales pick up their dialects through cultural learning. (Chris Bangs/Guam Variety News/Associated Press)

Whadd'ya at? Ow ya goin'? If you were at a picnic with a bunch of Newfoundlanders or Australians, those are the greetings you might flingaround.

Similarly, scientists who eavesdrop on sperm whales Moby Dick's species have found they also have distinct "dialects." And a new study suggests like human dialects, they arise through cultural learning.

"Cultural transmission seems key to the partitioning of sperm whales into clans," the researchers wrote in a paper published today in the journal Nature Communications.

Sperm whales live around the world, mainly in deeper waters far offshore. The solitary males live in colder areas, and roam in Canadian waters in areas where the ocean depth is more than 1000 metres, says MauricioCantor, the Dalhousie University PhD. student who led the new study with Hal Whitehead, a Dalhousie biology professor.

Dalhousie University Ph.D. student Mauricio Cantor and his colleagues recorded 18 years of 'conversations' among sperm whales near the Galapagos Islands from a boat equipped with underwater microphones. (Jennifer Modigliani)

The females live in warmer, more southern waters, in loose family groups of around seven to 12 whales sisters, aunts, grandmothers, cousins, and the occasional unrelated friend and their calves. Sometimes, they meet up with other families for gatherings of up to 200 whales, similar to human picnics or festivals. These can last from a few hours to a few days.

The whales that gather in these groups, called clans, have distinct "dialects" of patterns of clicks called codas that are distinct from the clicks they use in echolocation when they're hunting for food. They use codas talk to each other when they surface between dives.

"They kind of communicate with Morse code," said Cantor, adding that the sound of each click is similar, but the rhythm and tempo varies, along with the length of pauses between them.

If you listen to theexample below, you'll hearup to 10 whales from the microphone, some closer and some farther away from the microphone, making a distinctive coda.

Sperm whales from the same clan communicate near the Galapagos

Researchers don't yet know what the whales are saying. But they know that among a given clan, whales make some of the same patterns of clicks.

A sperm whale dives off the Galapagos Islands. Mauricio Cantor and his colleagues recorded 18 years of 'conversations' among sperm whales in the region from a boat equipped with underwater microphones. ( Mauricio Cantor/Whitehead Lab/Dalhousie University)

Cantor and hiscolleagues recorded 18 years of "conversations" among sperm whales near the Galapagos Islands from a boat equipped with underwater microphones. They found the whales in that region belong to two or three clans, each with a different coda.

Dialects not tied to geography

While regional variations in song are sometimes seen in birds, the variations in sperm whale codas isn't tied to geography.

"What is really interesting is they all use the same waters at the same time," Cantor said, "so they could potentially hear or listen to all these codas, but they choose to stick with their own pattern."

Cantor and his colleagues wondered how those different dialects might have arisen. Some possibilities were that:

  • They were due to genetic differences.
  • Mothers taught the codas to their calves.
  • Young whales learned the codas from other, unrelated whales.

The researchers ran computer simulations of virtual groups of whales over 1,000 years to see what kinds of factors would generate the types of patterns they saw in the actual data they collected.

The tail of a whale splashes in the ocean.
A sperm whale breaches in the waters off the the coast of Newport Beach, Calif. Sperm whales live around the world, mainly in deeper waters far offshore. The solitary males roam in Canadian waters, while females live in family groups in warmer, subtropical regions. (Lasanthi Benedict/Associated Press)

What they found was that in order to create clans with distinct dialects, young whales had to learn codas not just from their mothers, but also other adults. But that wasn't enough the young whales also had to prefer to learn codas:

  • Most similar to those used by their own family.
  • Most commonly used by whales in their social group.

"Which is similar to what we see in human populations," Cantor said. "I just find really, really fascinating that an animal that is completely different and lives in a completely different environment - they have some striking similarities with our societies Our findings suggest another line of evidence for animal culture."

He added that scientists still debate whether animals are capable of having culture, but if it's proven that they do, we might be more motivated to help conserve other species.

"We all tend to interact more with likeminded individuals," he said. "If we figure out somehow that we're not as different [from] other animals, maybe we can improve our relationship with the natural world or with nature."

Female sperm whales live in loose family groups of around seven to 12 whales. Sometimes, they meet up with other families for gatherings of up to 200 whales, similar to human picnics or festivals. These can last from a few hours to a few days (Mauricio Cantor/Whitehead Lab/Dalhousie University)