-
In 1985, three researchers on
a dolphin-studying expedition
-
got a little bored.
-
To lighten things up, one pretended
to be Poseidon
-
by placing a seaweed garland on his head
and then throwing it into the ocean.
-
Moments later, a dolphin surfaced
with the seaweed crowning her head.
-
Sure, this could have been a coincidence,
-
but it's also entirely possible that
the dolphin was mimicking the scientist.
-
That's because dolphins are one
of the smartest animals species on Earth.
-
So exactly how smart are they?
-
Like whales and porpoises,
-
dolphins belong to the group
of aquatic mammals
-
known as cetaceans
who comprise 86 different species,
-
and share a common link with ungulates,
or hoofed animals.
-
Originally land mammals,
-
the first cetaceans entered the water
about 55 million years ago
-
as large predators with sharp teeth.
-
Then, a shift in ocean temperatures
about 35 million years ago
-
reduced the availability of prey.
-
One group of cetaceans who survived
this distrubtion,
-
the odontocetes, wound up smaller
with less sharp teeth,
-
but also larger and more complex brains
-
that allowed for complex
social relationships,
-
as well as echolocation to navigate
and communicate.
-
Jump ahead to the present,
-
and modern dolphins' brains are so large
that they're encephalization quotient,
-
their brain size compared to the average
for their body size,
-
is second only to humans.
-
Dolphins have evolved to survive
-
through their ability to form
complex social networks
-
that hunt, ward off rivals,
and raise offspring together.
-
For example, one group of Florida dolphins
-
practices a sophisticated form
of cooperation to hunt fish.
-
A dolphin designated
as "the net-maker" kicks up mud
-
while another gives the signal
-
for the other dolphins to simultaneously
line up and catch the escaping fish.
-
Achieving a goal like this requires
deliberate planning and cooperation,
-
which in turn requires some form
of intentional communication.
-
Dolphins pass down their communication
method and other skills
-
from generation to generation.
-
Different dolphin populations exhibit
variations in greetings,
-
hunting strategies,
and other behaviors.
-
This sort of cultural transmission
even extends to tool use.
-
One group of bottlenose dolphins
off the Australian coast
-
nicknamed The Dolphin Sponge Club,
-
has learned how to cover their rostrums
with sponges when rooting in sharp corals,
-
passing the knowledge
from mother to daughter.
-
Dolphins have even demonstrated
language comprehension.
-
When taught a language based on
whistles and hand gestures,
-
they not only understood
what the signals meant,
-
but that their order had meaning:
-
the difference between
bringing the ball to the hoop
-
and bringing the hoop to the ball.
-
So they were able to process two
of the main elements of human language:
-
symbols that stand
for objects and actions,
-
and syntax that governs
how they are structured.
-
Dolphins are also one of the few species
who pass the mirror test.
-
By recognizing themselves in mirrors,
they indicate physical self-awareness,
-
and research shows they can recognize
not just their bodies,
-
but also their own thoughts,
a property called metacognition.
-
In one study,
dolphins comparing two sounds
-
could indicate a same, different,
or uncertain response.
-
Just like humans,
-
they indicated uncertainty
more often with difficult trials,
-
suggesting they're aware
of what they know,
-
and how confident they feel
about that knowledge.
-
But some of the most amazing things
about dolphins
-
are their senses of empathy, altruism,
and attachment.
-
The habit of helping injured individuals
extends across the species barrier
-
as evidenced by the many accounts
-
of dolphins carrying humans
to the surface to breath.
-
And like us, dolphins mourn their dead.
-
When we consider all the evidence,
-
we may wonder why humans still hunt
dolphins for meat,
-
endangering them through fishing
and pollution,
-
or imprison them to perform tricks.
-
The ultimate question may not be
whether dolphins are intelligent
-
and complex beings,
-
but whether humans can empathize with them
enough to keep them safe and free.