
What's that Flipper? Scientists listen in on incredulous whistling dolphins
The official name for the dolphin vocalisation was 'non signature whistle B'. The 'suggested function of this whistle type', the researchers wrote in careful language, was 'as a 'query'.'
They also had an unofficial, perhaps slightly less careful, name for it. Laela Sayigh, from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, said they had called it 'the WTF whistle'. They used the unprintable internet acronym for incredulity because that was what seemed to be going on. It was a noise the dolphins seemed to make when something strange was afoot.
Sayigh's work investigating this and other dolphin calls has led to her being shortlisted for the world's newest scientific award: the Coller-Dolittle prize for interspecies communication. This is a $100,000 annual prize for research into understanding what animals

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
21-05-2025
- NBC News
Clownfish shrink their bodies to survive ocean heat waves
To survive warming oceans, clownfish cope by shrinking in size. Scientists observed that some of the orange-striped fish shrank their bodies during a heat wave off the coast of Papua New Guinea. Fish that slimmed were more likely to survive. Heat waves are becoming more common and intense underwater due to climate change. Warmer water temperatures can bleach sea anemones that clownfish call home, forcing them to adapt to stay alive. Scientists monitored and measured 134 colorful clownfish in Kimbe Bay during an intense heat wave in 2023 that's still bleaching corals worldwide. They found that 101 clownfish decreased in length on one or more occasions from heat stress. 'We were really shocked at first when we saw that they were shrinking at all,' said study author Morgan Bennett-Smith with Boston University. The findings were published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances. Though scientists don't yet know how clownfish shrink, one idea is that they could be reabsorbing their own bone matter. It's possible the smaller stature may help the clownfish save energy during a stressful scorch since smaller fish need less food. Certain clownfish breeding pairs also synced their shrink to boost their survival odds. The females adjusted their size to stay bigger than their partners, keeping the female-dominated social hierarchy intact, researchers said. Other animals also decrease in size to beat the heat. Marine iguanas get smaller during El Niño events that usher warm waters into the Galapagos. But this coping strategy hadn't yet been spotted in coral reef fish until now. 'This is another tool in the toolbox that fish are going to use to deal with a changing world,' said Simon Thorrold, an ocean ecologist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution who was not involved with the new study. The tactic helps clownfish weather heat waves in the short-term, but it's not yet clear how the fish will fare if they have to keep it up in the years to come, Thorrold said. Researchers found the shrinking was temporary. Clownfish possessed the ability to 'catch up' and grow back when their environment got less stressful, showing how living things are staying flexible to keep up with a warming world, said study author Melissa Versteeg with Newcastle University.


The Guardian
15-05-2025
- The Guardian
US scientists who deciphered dolphin whistles win prize for animal communication
A $100,000 prize for communicating with animals has been scooped by researchers who have shed light on the meaning of dolphins' whistles. The Coller-Dolittle Prize for Two-way Inter-species Communication was launched last year by the Jeremy Coller Foundation and Tel Aviv University. The winning team, the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program led by Laela Sayigh and Peter Tyack from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, has been studying bottle-nosed dolphins in waters near Sarasota, Florida, for more than four decades. The researchers used non-invasive technologies such as hydrophones and digital acoustic tags attached by suction cups to record the animals' sounds. These include name-like 'signature' whistles, as well as 'non-signature' whistles – sounds that make up about 50% of the animals' calls but are poorly understood. In their latest work, which has not yet been peer-reviewed, the team identified at least 20 different types of non-signature whistle that are produced by multiple dolphins, finding two types were each shared by at least 25 individuals. When the researchers played these two sounds back to dolphins they found one triggered avoidance in the animals, suggesting it could be an alarm signal, while the other triggered a range of responses, suggesting it could be a sound made by dolphins when they encounter something unexpected. Sayigh said the win was a surprise, adding: 'I really didn't expect it, so I am beyond thrilled. It is such an honour.' The judging panel was led by Yossi Yovel, professor of zoology at Tel Aviv University, whose own team has previously used machine-learning algorithms to unpick the meaning of squeaks made by bats as they argue. 'We were mostly impressed by the long term, huge dataset that was created, and we're sure that it will lead to many more new and interesting results,' said Yovel, adding the judges were also impressed by team's use of non-invasive technology to record the animals' calls, and the use of drones and speakers to demonstrate the dolphins' responses in the field. Yovel added the judges hope the prize will aid the application of AI to the data to reveal even more impressive results. Jonathan Birch, professor of philosophy at London School of Economics and one of the judges, said the main thing stopping humans from cracking the code of animal communication is a lack of data. 'Think of the trillion words needed to train a large language model like ChatGPT. We don't have anything like this for other animals,' he said. 'That's why we need programs like the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program, which has built up an extraordinary library of dolphin whistles over 40 years. The cumulative result of all that work is that Laela Sayigh and her team can now use deep learning to analyse the whistles and perhaps, one day, crack the code.' Yovel said about 20 teams entered this year's competition, resulting in four finalists. Besides Sayigh and Tyack's team, these included teams working on understanding communication in nightingales, cuttlefish, and marmosets. He added the 2025/2026 prize is now open for applications. However as well as an annual award of $100,000, there is also a grand prize up for grabs totalling either $10m in investment or $500,000 in cash. To win that, researchers must develop an algorithm to allow an animal to 'communicate independently without recognising that it is communicating with humans' – something Jeremy Coller suggested might be achieved within the next five years. The challenge is inspired by the Turing test for AI, whereby humans must be unable to tell whether they are conversing with a computer or a real person for the system to be deemed successful. Robert Seyfarth, emeritus professor of psychology at the University of Pennsylvania, who was not involved with the prize, welcomed the win. 'These are outstanding scientists, doing work that has revolutionised our understanding of dolphin communication and cognition. This is well-deserved recognition,' he said. Clara Mancini, professor of animal-computer interaction at the Open University, added the dolphin work shows technology's potential to advance our understanding of animal communication, possibly one day even enabling us to communicate with them on their own terms. 'I think one of the main benefits of these advances is that they could finally demonstrate that animals' communication systems can be just as sophisticated and effective for use in the environments in which their users have evolved, as human language is for our species,' she said. 'However, on the journey towards interspecies communication, I would suggest, we need to remain mindful that deciphering a language is not the same as understanding the experience of language users and that, as well as curiosity, the challenge requires humility and respect for the unique knowledge and worldview that each species possesses.'


Times
04-05-2025
- Times
What's that Flipper? Scientists listen in on incredulous whistling dolphins
The official name for the dolphin vocalisation was 'non signature whistle B'. The 'suggested function of this whistle type', the researchers wrote in careful language, was 'as a 'query'.' They also had an unofficial, perhaps slightly less careful, name for it. Laela Sayigh, from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, said they had called it 'the WTF whistle'. They used the unprintable internet acronym for incredulity because that was what seemed to be going on. It was a noise the dolphins seemed to make when something strange was afoot. Sayigh's work investigating this and other dolphin calls has led to her being shortlisted for the world's newest scientific award: the Coller-Dolittle prize for interspecies communication. This is a $100,000 annual prize for research into understanding what animals