Orcas' Strange Beauty Routine Revealed by Scientists For The First Time
For the first time, orcas have been recorded making and using tools, fashioning pieces of kelp so that they can groom each other as they swim.
The new discovery in these remarkable animals (Orcinus orca) isn't just a wonderful example of reciprocal aid. It displays several aspects of cognition and culture in a format that we had never seen in orcas before.
"We found that southern resident killer whales regularly use lengths of bull kelp during social interactions, apparently as a tool to groom one another," says marine zoologist Michael Weiss of the Center for Whale Research in the US.
"To find that the whales were not just using but also manufacturing tools, and that these objects were being used in a way never before reported in marine mammals, was incredibly exciting."
Related: Orcas Have a Killer Technique to Hunt The Biggest Fish in The Ocean
The use of tools is thought to be an important marker of intelligence in non-human animals. Although cetaceans are highly intelligent, tool use among them is not widely documented. That's at least partially because their habitat – the ocean – makes them difficult to observe. Nevertheless, we have seen tool use in bottlenose dolphins, which use sea sponges to protect their beaks while foraging.
Orcas have the second-largest brain found in nature, and are among the most intelligent animals known. So it's tremendously exciting to find that they are capable of creating a tool to make their lives better.
Weiss and his colleagues have been studying the critically endangered southern resident population of orcas that lives in the Salish Sea, a group with fewer than 80 members. In recent years, drone technology has dramatically upgraded our ability to observe orcas in their natural habitat, and scientists have been taking full advantage of the opportunity.
"We began using a new drone to observe the whales that allowed us to see the whales and their behavior in much greater detail," Weiss explained to ScienceAlert.
"We quickly started seeing whales carrying these small pieces of kelp and pressing them between each other. Once we had observed several pairs doing this behavior on multiple days, we started to think that something scientifically interesting was occurring here."
On seven occasions, the orcas were seen snapping the ends off pieces of bull kelp (Nereocystis luetkeana), then pressing the stalk between their bodies. In an eighth case, an orca just found a suitable piece of kelp floating in a kelp mat.
As they swam with their bodies pressed together, the orca pairs would roll the piece of the kelp back and forth between them for extended periods.
We don't know exactly why the whales do this, but we can make a pretty good guess. Some species of cetacean, including orcas, like to frolic amid flotillas of seaweed. This is called kelping, and it helps keep their skin healthy, sloughing off dead cells and parasites.
The new behavior, which Weiss and his colleagues call allokelping, is likely the next level of this form of grooming – one which confers greater benefits than just swimming through kelp.
"It certainly does appear to be a social activity, and might help reinforce social bonds like other forms of grooming," Weiss explained.
"Unlike swimming through a kelp mat or a kelp forest, pairs of whales can allokelp 'on the go', continuing to travel with the rest of the pod. I also suspect that they're able to target specific areas more precisely and exert greater pressure than if they were just swimming through kelp on their own."
Although orcas around the world are all categorized as a single species, they don't really behave as one. Distinct populations, called ecotypes, have their own habitats, their own languages, their own hunting and dietary strategies. There are physical and genetic differences between them, and they don't intermingle or interbreed.
Other orca ecotypes have been observed grooming themselves in ways that don't involve fashioning tools, such as rubbing themselves on pebble beaches. Weiss and his team believe that allokelping may be a behavior that is culturally unique to the southern resident orca population.
It's a finding that highlights the importance of studying and understanding this tiny population of orcas, in order to better protect them and their habitat.
"What's surprising is how much we still have to learn about this population, despite them having been studied in great detail since the 1970s!" Weiss said.
"More research is very much needed to better understand the development and function of this behavior. We are very interested to see how allokelping might impact other social behaviors, as an indication of a function in social bonding. We're also keen to conduct more detailed analysis of allokelping and skin condition over time to determine what benefit the behavior is giving the whales."
The research has been published in Current Biology.
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USA Today
a day ago
- USA Today
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Yahoo
07-08-2025
- Yahoo
An Astrophysicist Proposes We Send a Spacecraft to Visit a Black Hole
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Yahoo
06-08-2025
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Ancient Tools Suggest Indonesian 'Hobbits' Had a Mysterious Neighbor
The ancestors of the ancient 'hobbits' who once lived on the Indonesian island of Flores were not the only early hominins to cross deep ocean barriers more than a million years ago. A team of archaeologists from Indonesia and Australia has now discovered the tools of a mysterious neighbor who resided on the island of Sulawesi to the north around the same time, if not earlier. "It's highly unlikely these early hominins had the cognitive capacity (especially the ability for advanced planning) required to invent boats," archaeologist and co-lead of the expedition, Adam Brumm, told ScienceAlert. "It is more likely that hominins got to Sulawesi by accident, most probably as a result of 'rafting' on natural vegetation mats. It's thought rodents and monkeys made overwater crossings from the Asian mainland to reach Sulawesi in this way." Related: The seven flaked stones on Sulawesi were found at different depths below ground, but according to the dating of local sandstone and a nearby pig fossil, the tools range in age from 1.04 million years to 1.48 million years. If correct, the artifacts could represent the earliest evidence of human activity in Wallacea – a string of mainly Indonesian islands that has separated the Asian and Australian continents for millions of years. The identity of the isolated toolmakers remains a mystery. Brumm has been studying early hominins in the region for decades, and he co-led the recent archaeological expedition on Sulawesi with Budianto Hakim from the National Research and Innovation Agency of Indonesia (BRIN). Archaeologist Debbie Argue, who was not involved in the discovery, told ScienceAlert the findings are "most important", because they add to the startling fact that early Pleistocene hominins could somehow make sea crossings. "With evidence for hominins on three islands that have never been attached to a mainland – Flores, Luzon, and now Sulawesi – island Southeast Asia is shaping up to be an extraordinary frontier for human evolution," said Argue. Until now, the earliest evidence of stone tools in Wallacea – which are thought to be 1.02 million years old – came from the island of Flores. Flores is the same place where archaeologists discovered the short-statured Homo floresiensis – also known as the 'hobbit' – in a cave in 2003. This meter-high hominin (3.3 feet) with a brain the size of grapefruit took the world by surprise when it was found, because it didn't look like any other early human. The remains of H. floriensis date up to 100,000 years ago, but its presumed ancestors on the island date back 700,000 years. The 1.02 million-year-old stone tools on Flores were probably made by those ancestors – whether descended from Homo erectus or another hominin species on the Asian mainland. According to a 2021 interview with archaeologist Lucy Timbrell, Brumm accidentally happened upon the Flores tools while "nursing an appalling hangover" due to a local village ceremony the night before. "Whilst stumbling about in the sweltering heat, in a bewildered state, I found some heavily patinated stone tools eroding out from a fluvial conglomerate exposed at the base of a gully," Brumm recalled in the interview. "I have since tried to make major archaeological discoveries while hungover, but it only worked that one time." Archaeologists have yet to uncover hominin fossils on Sulawesi, but the evidence of stone tools indicates their existence. It's unknown if the Sulawesi population was related to hominins on Flores, but the late Mike Morwood, one of the co-discoverers of the 2003 'hobbit', was convinced that Sulawesi was the key to understanding where H. floresiensis came from. "We had always suspected that hominins were established on Sulawesi for a very long period of time, but until now we had never found clear evidence," Brumm told ScienceAlert. Influenced by Morwood's thinking, Brumm suspects that Sulawesi was once a stepping stone to Flores from mainland Asia (which once stretched as far as Java and Borneo). In 2010, Morwood told The Guardian that he suspected tools on Sulawesi could date back two million years. "This is going to put the cat among the pigeons," he said at the time. No doubt he would have been thrilled by the recent work of Brumm's and Hakim's team. The archaeologists now plan to search Sulawesi for direct remains of the mysterious tool makers. "We are also working at much younger sites that we hope will provide insight into what happened to these early humans when our species arrived on the island at least 65,000 years ago," said Brumm. The study was published in Nature. Related News DNA Casts Doubt Over Theory on What Killed Napoleon's Forces Study Reveals How Many IVF Babies Have Been Born Worldwide Image on The Shroud of Turin May Not Belong to a Real Human Solve the daily Crossword