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Grief and love in the animal kingdom

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    I'd like to tell you today
    about an orca named Tahlequah.
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    Tahlequah is also known
    as J35 to scientists,
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    because she swims with the J Pod
    in the Salish Sea.
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    These are the waters off of
    British Columbia and Washington State.
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    Now, last year, in July 2018,
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    she was well along
    in her 17-month pregnancy,
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    and scientists were very excited
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    because no baby had survived
    in this pod for three long years.
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    Now, orcas are also
    known as killer whales.
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    They're profoundly social
    and profoundly intelligent beings.
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    And scientists are very interested
    in their behavior,
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    because in their social networks,
    they share habits, information
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    and even affection.
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    They create true cultures of the ocean.
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    But this pod has been in trouble.
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    The Chinook salmon that the orcas favor
    has been way down in the region,
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    and pollution has been up.
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    But on July 24th, Tahlequah
    gave birth to a daughter,
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    and scientists were so excited
    by this development.
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    But unfortunately, the same day --
    in fact, shortly after birth --
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    the calf died.
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    Well, what happened next
    electrified animal lovers
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    across the world,
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    because Tahlequah refused
    to let her baby slip off into the water.
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    She kept it on her body
    and she swam with it.
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    If it did fall off,
    she would dive and rescue it,
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    and she battled stiff currents to do this.
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    Now, she kept this behavior up
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    for 17 days,
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    and during this time,
    she swam over 1,000 miles.
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    At that point, she let the little baby
    slip off into the water.
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    So today, Tahlequah
    swims on with the J Pod,
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    but her grief still moves me.
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    And I do believe that "grief"
    is the right word to use.
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    I believe that grief
    is the right word to use
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    for numerous animals who mourn the dead.
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    They may be friends or mates or relatives.
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    Because these visible cues,
    these behavioral cues,
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    tell us something about
    an animal's emotional state.
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    Now, for the last seven years,
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    I've been working to document
    examples of animal grief --
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    in birds, in mammals,
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    in domesticated animals
    and in wild animals --
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    and I believe in the reality
    of animal grief.
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    Now, I say it this way
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    because I need to acknowledge
    to you right up front
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    that not all scientists agree with me.
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    And part of the reason, I think,
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    is because of what I call the "a-word."
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    The a-word is anthropomorphism,
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    and historically,
    it's been a big deterrent
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    to recognizing animal emotions.
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    So, anthropomorphism is when
    we project onto other animals
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    our capacities or our emotions.
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    And we can all probably
    think of examples of this.
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    Let's say we have a friend who tells us,
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    "My cat understands everything I say."
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    Or, "My dog, he's so sweet.
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    he ran right across the yard this morning
    towards a squirrel,
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    and I know he just wants to play."
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    Well, maybe.
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    Or maybe not.
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    I'm skeptical about claims like those.
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    But animal grief is different,
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    because we're not trying
    to read an animal's mind.
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    We're looking at visible cues of behavior
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    and trying to interpret them
    with some meaning.
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    Now, it's true -- scientists
    often push back at me,
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    and they'll say,
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    "Ah, look, the animal might be stressed,
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    or maybe the animal's just confused
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    because his or her routine
    has been disrupted."
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    But I think that this overworry
    about anthropomorphism
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    misses a fundamental point.
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    And that is that animals
    can care very deeply for each other,
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    maybe they even love each other.
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    And when they do,
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    a survivor's heart
    can be pierced by a death.
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    Let's face it:
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    if we deny evolutionary continuity,
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    we are really missing out
    on embracing part of ourselves.
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    So yes, I believe in the reality
    of animal grief,
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    and I also think that if we recognize it,
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    we can make the world
    a better place for animals,
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    a kinder place for animals.
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    So let me tell you a little bit more
    about animal grief.
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    I'm going to start in Kenya.
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    You see here there's
    an elephant named Eleanor
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    who came one day with bruised legs,
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    and she collapsed.
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    You see on the left
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    that another female named Grace
    came to her right away
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    and, using her own trunk, propped her up,
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    tried to get her up on her feet.
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    And she did succeed,
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    but then Eleanor collapsed again.
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    At this point, Grace became
    visibly distressed,
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    and she prodded the body,
    and she vocalized.
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    Eleanor collapsed again,
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    and unfortunately, she did die.
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    What you see on the right is a female
    from another family named Maui,
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    who came after the death,
    and she stayed at the body.
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    She held a vigil there,
    and she even rocked in distress
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    over the body.
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    So the scientists watching the elephants
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    kept close observation on Eleanor's body
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    for seven days.
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    And during those seven days,
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    a parade of elephants came
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    from five different families.
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    Now, some were just curious,
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    but others carried out behaviors
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    that I really believe
    should be classified as grief.
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    So what does grief look like?
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    It can be rocking, as I said, in distress.
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    It can also be social withdrawal,
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    when an animal just takes
    himself or herself away from friends
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    and stays by themselves,
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    or a failure to eat or sleep properly,
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    sometimes a depressed posture
    or vocalization.
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    It can be very helpful
    for those of us studying this
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    to be able to compare the behavior
    of a survivor before death
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    and after death,
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    because that increases the rigor
    of our interpretation.
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    And I can explain this to you
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    by talking about two ducks
    named Harper and Kohl.
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    So we're into birds now.
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    So Harper and Kohl were raised
    at a foie gras factory,
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    and they were treated cruelly.
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    Foie gras does involve
    force-feeding of birds.
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    So this hurt their bodies, and their
    spirits were not in good shape, either.
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    But thankfully, they were rescued
    by a farm sanctuary in upstate New York.
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    And for four years, they stabilized,
    and they were fast friends.
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    They often took themselves
    to a small pond on the property.
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    Then, Kohl started to have
    really intractable pain his legs,
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    and it was clear to the sanctuary
    that he had to be euthanized humanely,
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    and he was.
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    But then the sanctuary workers
    did a brilliant thing,
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    because they brought Harper
    to the body to see.
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    And at first, Harper prodded
    the body of his friend,
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    but then he laid himself over it,
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    and he stayed there
    for over an hour with his friend.
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    And in the weeks after,
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    he had a hard time.
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    He would go back to that same pond
    where he had been with Kohl,
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    and he didn't want any other friends.
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    And within two months, he died as well.
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    Now, I'm happy to say
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    that not all grieving animals
    have this sorrowful outcome.
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    Last summer, I flew to Boston
    to visit my adult daughter, Sarah.
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    I was with my husband Charlie.
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    I really needed a break from work.
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    But I succumbed,
    and I checked my work email.
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    You know how that is.
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    And there was a communication
    about a dejected donkey.
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    Now, as an anthropologist,
    this wasn't what I expected,
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    but there it was, and I'm glad I read it.
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    Because a donkey named Lena
    had gone to another farm sanctuary,
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    this one in Alberta, Canada,
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    as the only donkey there,
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    and had trouble making friends
    for that reason.
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    But she eventually did make friends
    with an older horse named Jake,
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    and for three years they were inseparable.
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    But the reason the email came
    was that Jake, at age 32, the horse,
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    had become gravely ill
    and had to be put down,
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    and this is what was going on.
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    This is Lena standing on Jake's grave.
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    She didn't want to come in at night.
    She didn't want to come in for food.
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    She didn't want to come in for water.
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    She pawed at the grave,
    she brayed in distress,
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    and there she stood.
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    So we talked and we brainstormed.
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    What do you do for an animal like this?
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    And we talked about the role of time,
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    of extra love and kindness from people
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    and of urging her to make a new friend.
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    And here's where her trajectory does
    diverge from that of Harper the duck,
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    because she did make a new friend,
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    and sanctuary workers wrote back
    and said it worked out well.
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    Now sometimes, scientists
    supplement observation
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    with hormonal analysis.
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    There's an example of a group
    of scientists in Botswana,
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    who took fecal material from baboons
    and compared two different groups.
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    The first group were females
    who had witnessed a predator attack
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    and lost someone in that attack,
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    and the second group were females
    who had witnessed an attack
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    but had not lost someone.
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    And the stress hormones
    were way up in that first group.
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    But here's the thing:
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    the scientists didn't just
    call them "stressed baboons,"
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    they called them "bereaved baboons,"
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    and in part, that's because
    of the observations that they made.
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    For example, this mother-daughter
    pair were very close,
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    and then the daughter
    was killed by a lion.
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    The mother removed herself
    from all her friends,
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    from her grooming networks,
    and just stayed by herself for weeks --
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    bereavement --
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    and she then slowly recovered.
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    So we have bereaved baboons.
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    Will science tell us someday
    about bereaved bees?
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    Will we hear about frogs who mourn?
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    I don't think so, and I think the reason
    is because animals really need
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    one-to-one, close relationships
    for that to happen.
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    I also know that circumstance matters,
    and personality matters.
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    I have documented
    cats and dogs who grieve,
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    our companion animals,
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    but I also interacted with a woman
    who was extremely bothered
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    because her dog wasn't grieving.
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    She said to me, "The first dog
    in the house has died.
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    The second animal does not
    seem concerned, the second dog.
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    What is wrong with him?"
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    (Laughter)
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    And as I listened to her,
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    I realized that this dog was now
    the only animal in the household,
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    and as far as he was concerned,
    that was a pretty good deal.
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    So circumstances matter.
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    Now, in any case, animals
    are not going to grieve
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    exactly like we do.
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    We have human creativity.
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    We paint our grief, dance our grief,
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    write our grief.
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    We also can grieve for people
    we've never met,
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    across space and time.
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    I felt this strongly when I went to Berlin
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    and I stood at the Holocaust Memorial.
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    Animals don't grieve exactly like we do,
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    but this doesn't mean
    that their grief isn't real.
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    It is real, and it's searing,
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    and we can see it if we choose.
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    Now, I've lost both my parents.
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    I lost a very dear friend
    at a young age from AIDS.
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    I believe most likely most of you
    here have lost someone.
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    And I have found it a genuine comfort,
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    a solace, to know that we aren't
    the only beings on this earth
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    who feel love and grief.
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    And I think this is important.
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    I also think we can take
    this a step further,
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    and we can realize
    that the reality of animal grief
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    can help us be better
    and do better for animals.
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    This is already happening with Tahlequah,
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    because the United States and Canada have
    renewed their talks with greater urgency
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    for how to help the orcas,
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    how to restore the Chinook salmon
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    and how to help with the water pollution.
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    We can also see that if grief is real,
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    there's tremendous
    plausibility to the notion
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    that animals feel a whole range of things.
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    So we could look at joy,
    sadness, even hope.
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    And if we do that,
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    here's how we can start
    to think about the world.
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    We can look at orcas and say,
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    we know they grieve,
    we know they feel their lives,
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    and we can refuse to confine them
    to small tanks in theme parks
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    and make them perform
    for our entertainment.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    We can look at elephants
    and say, yes, they grieve,
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    and we can renew our efforts
    against international trophy hunting
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    and against poaching.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    And we can look at our closest
    living relatives, monkeys and apes,
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    and know yes they grieve,
    they feel their lives,
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    so they don't deserve to be confined
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    in highly invasive biomedical experiments
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    year after year.
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    And, you know --
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    (Applause)
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    the ducks Harper and Kohl,
    they tell us something too.
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    They help us connect the dots
    and realize that what we eat
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    affects how animals live.
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    And it's not just foie gras,
    and it's not just ducks.
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    We can think about pigs and chickens
    and cows in factory farms,
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    and we can know.
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    I can tell you the science is real
    that these animals feel, too.
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    So every single time
    we choose a plant-based meal,
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    we are contributing
    to reducing animal suffering.
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    (Applause)
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    So yes, I believe in the reality
    of animal grief.
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    I believe in the reality of animal love,
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    and I think it is time for us humans
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    to recognize that
    we don't own these things.
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    And when we see that,
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    we have an opportunity to make the world
    so much better for animals,
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    a kinder world, a gentler world,
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    and along the way, we might
    just save ourselves, too.
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    Thank you so much.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you. Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Grief and love in the animal kingdom
Speaker:
Barbara J. King
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:42

English subtitles

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