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The amazing grandmothers of the killer whale pod - Darren Croft

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    Off the rugged coast
    of the pacific northwest,
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    pods of killer whales
    inhabit the frigid waters.
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    Each family is able to survive here
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    thanks mainly to one member,
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    its most knowledgeable hunter:
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    the grandmother.
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    These matriarchs can live eighty years
    or more,
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    while most males die off
    in their thirties.
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    Though killer whales inhabit
    every major ocean,
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    until recently we knew
    very little about them.
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    The details of their lives
    eluded scientists
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    until an organization called
    the Center for Whale Research
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    began studying a single population
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    near Washington State and
    British Columbia in 1976.
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    Thanks to their on going work,
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    we’ve learned a great deal
    about these whales,
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    known as the Southern Residents.
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    And the more we learn,
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    the more this population’s elders’
    vital role comes into focus.
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    Each grandmother starts her life as a calf
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    born into her mother’s family group,
    or matriline.
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    The family does everything together,
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    hunting and playing, even communicating
    through their own unique set of calls.
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    Both sons and daughters spend their entire
    lives with their mothers’ families.
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    That doesn’t mean a young whale
    only interacts with her relatives.
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    Besides their own special calls,
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    her matriline shares a dialect
    with nearby families,
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    and they socialize regularly.
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    Once a female reaches age fifteen or so,
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    these meetings become opportunities
    to mate with males from other groups.
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    The relationships don’t go much
    beyond mating—
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    she and her calves stay with her family,
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    while the male returns to his own mother.
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    Until approximately age forty,
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    she gives birth every 6 years on average.
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    Then, she goes through menopause—
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    which is almost unheard of
    in the animal kingdom.
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    In fact, humans, killer whales and
    a few other whales
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    are the only species whose females
    continue to live for years
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    after they stop reproducing.
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    After menopause,
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    grandmothers take the lead
    hunting for salmon,
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    the Southern Residents’ main food source.
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    Most of the winter they forage offshore,
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    supplementing salmon with other fish.
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    But when the salmon head
    towards shore in droves to spawn
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    the killer whales follow.
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    The matriarch shows the younger whales
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    where to find the most fertile
    fishing grounds.
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    She also shares up to 90% of
    the salmon she catches.
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    With each passing year,
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    her contributions become more vital:
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    overfishing and habitat destruction have
    decimated salmon populations,
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    putting the whales at near-constant
    risk of starvation.
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    These grandmothers’ expertise
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    can mean the difference between
    life and death for their families–
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    but why do they stop having calves?
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    It’s almost always advantageous for a
    female to continue reproducing,
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    even if she also cares for her existing
    children and grandchildren.
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    A couple unique circumstances
    change this equation for killer whales.
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    The fact that neither sons or daughters
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    leave their families of origin
    is extremely rare—
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    in almost all animal species,
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    one or both sexes disperse.
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    This means that as a female
    killer whale ages,
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    a greater percentage of her family
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    consists of her children
    and grandchildren,
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    while more distant relatives die off.
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    Because older females are more closely
    related to the group than younger females,
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    they do best to invest in the family
    as a whole,
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    whereas younger females should
    invest in reproducing.
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    In the killer whale’s environment,
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    every new calf is another mouth to feed
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    on limited, shared resources.
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    An older female can further her genes
    without burdening her family
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    by supporting her adult sons,
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    who sire calves other families will raise.
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    This might be why the females have evolved
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    to stop reproducing entirely
    in middle age.
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    Even with the grandmothers’ contributions,
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    the Southern Resident killer whales
    are critically endangered,
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    largely due to a decline in salmon.
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    We urgently need to invest in restoring
    salmon populations
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    to save them from extinction.
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    In the long term, we’ll need more studies
    like the Center for Whale Research’s.
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    What we’ve learned about
    the Southern Residents
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    may not hold true for other groups.
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    By studying other populations closely,
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    we might uncover more
    startling adaptations,
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    and anticipate their vulnerabilities
    to human interference
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    before their survival is at risk.
Title:
The amazing grandmothers of the killer whale pod - Darren Croft
Speaker:
Darren Croft
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:49

English subtitles

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