• Dolphins Are Tool Using Animals: Use Shell to Catch Fish
    55 replies, posted
[RELEASE] [IMG]http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/wiredscience/2011/08/conching2.jpg[/IMG] Already famed as Earth’s first tool-using marine mammals, the bottlenose dolphins of Australia’s Shark Bay have proved handy yet again, by using conch shells to trap tasty fish, then shaking them into their mouths like sardines from a tin. Unlike sponging, however, in which dolphins use sponges to find fishes hiding in mud, conching isn’t yet widespread in Shark Bay. It appears to be a relatively new innovation, pioneered by a few individuals and finally catching on. “The extent to which the conch shell is manipulated and the rarity of the behavior suggest that ‘conching’ takes some skill and practice and might thus be another rare individual foraging tactic in Shark Bay,” wrote biologists led by the University of Zurich’s Michael Krutzen in Marine Mammal Science. While that study came out in April, an Aug. 24 press release from Australia’s Murdoch University, home of co-authors Simon Allen and Lars Bejder, reported that conching has been observed at least six times in the last four months. That’s as often as conching was seen between the first sighting in December 1996 and the afternoon of July 31, 2007, when during a survey of western Shark Bay the researchers spotted an unfamiliar dolphin. As they lingered nearby, hoping to dart a biopsy sample from her skin, the dolphin dived and then surfaced with her beak lodged in a conch shell, which she waved back and forth above the water. She dove again. Before she surfaced, four more dolphins arrived. When she returned with the conch, they were waiting and watching. So were the researchers. “Photographs were taken, with two of these clearly revealing the posterior portion of a fish protruding from the conch aperture and held in the dolphin’s jaws,” they wrote in Marine Mammal Science. “The dolphin lifted the conch out of the water and manipulated it in such a manner as to drain the water and the fish from the shell.” It appeared to be an emperor fish. [IMG]http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/wiredscience/2011/08/conching-660x473.jpg[/IMG] Until the researchers photographed Con — sort for “Concher,” as they code-named the dolphin — the purpose of conch-wielding was unknown. From their handful of fleeting glimpses over the years, the researchers thought it likely that dolphins were simply eating conch snails inside their shells, or perhaps showing off, as do stick-wielding, clay-throwing dolphins in the Amazon. Almost two years later, in April 2009, the researchers saw another conching dolphin, this time in a shallow, seagrass-covered spot where a wildlife observer had seen dolphins digging through seabed with shells of baler, another large marine mollusk. Exactly how the shells are used underwater isn’t yet known. Fish might swim into them while being chased, unwittingly turning themselves into packaged snacks. The dolphins could also use the shells like nets or containers, a possibility suggested by the wildlife observer’s report of seabed-digging. Also unknown is how conching emerged: as a variation on sponging, perhaps, or in flashes of insight from creatures whose intelligence may rival our own but happen to lack fingers and hands. Because Shark Bay’s dolphins are very territorial, however, and conching has been witnessed in disparate locations on its east and west sides, the researchers believe conching was discovered several times independently. If, as with sponging, conching is taught primarily by females to other females, then conching was likely an invention of single mothers trying to feed their families. That it’s being witnessed with more frequency suggests Shark Bay’s dolphins are learning about it. Perhaps those four who watched Con were taking a lesson. So far, only one male dolphin, the individual spotted in 2009, has been seen conching. While his name among dolphins is unknown, the researchers dubbed him Wim, short for William the Concherer. Top photo: Simon Allen, Lars Bejder/Murdoch University [/RELEASE] Source: [url]http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/08/dolphin-fishing/[/url]
They're getting smarter... [IMG]http://images.wikia.com/villains/images/a/a8/270963260.jpg[/IMG]
Dolphins are also assholes.
[quote]the researchers dubbed him Wim, short for William the Concherer.[/quote] Damn researchers, stealing all the good news puns.
[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1EBqPZyo88[/media]
That's pretty cool I knew they used tools but the conching is interesting
Dolphins are the only animals that fuck for pleasure. I want to fuck dolphins
[QUOTE=Shiftyze;31956792]Dolphins are the only animals that fuck for pleasure. I want to fuck dolphins[/QUOTE] what the fuck man
[QUOTE=Shiftyze;31956792]Dolphins are the only animals that fuck for pleasure. I want to fuck dolphins[/QUOTE]DQLPHIN?
[QUOTE=john_frohman;31956830]what the fuck man[/QUOTE]Yeah waddup
Silly dolphins, they think they're people!
Only a matter of time before they develop religion.
[QUOTE=Dave_Parker;31957274]Only a matter of time before they develop religion.[/QUOTE] We must make sure they can never supplant humans.
[QUOTE=Dave_Parker;31957274]Only a matter of time before they develop religion.[/QUOTE] republican dolphins
[QUOTE=Doctor Zedacon;31956872]DQLPHIN?[/QUOTE] PQRPQISE?
shellfish bastards
ekkeke
What constitutes tool use? Does it have to be something that's picked up? Or is it simply using an object to make a task easier? If it's the later then we're going to find that many animals use tools. The other day I was reading an article on NatGeo about this fish that would smash shells up against rocks to open them. The researchers were debating whether or not that was considered tool use. What do you think?
[QUOTE=OvB;31957993]What constitutes tool use? Does it have to be something that's picked up? Or is it simply using an object to make a task easier? If it's the later then we're going to find that many animals use tools. The other day I was reading an article on NatGeo about this fish that would smash shells up against rocks to open them. The researchers were debating whether or not that was considered tool use. What do you think?[/QUOTE] I always thought tools were things "made" from something, but all the "tool use" I've heard of when applied to animals has just been things like sticks and rocks, so I guess I was wrong. Don't get me wrong though, it's fucking fascinating to see this kind of thing in nature.
[QUOTE=Shiftyze;31956792]Dolphins [B]are the only animals [/B]that fuck for pleasure. I want to fuck dolphins[/QUOTE] Nope, bonobos (Pygmy Chimps) do this too (if your statement is true, that is, AFAIK the only animals that fuck for another thing that is not having offsprings are bonobos and humans)
[QUOTE=RoflKawpter;31957830]republican dolphins[/QUOTE] They already proved that they are too smart for that.
[QUOTE=Charlievrw;31958518]They already proved that they are too smart for that.[/QUOTE] Dibs on being the first guy to educate the first "intelligent" dolphin.
they'll never be smart enough to outsmart a harpoon
[QUOTE=Dave_Parker;31958586]Dibs on being the first guy to educate the first "intelligent" dolphin.[/QUOTE] You put it in quotations as if dolphins are not intelligent. Research is gradually putting dolphins among the most intelligent animals on this planet. They're debatably more intelligent than some primates. Allow Attenborough to explain: [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EaEYSjYDlRs[/media] [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_TN7GJvNN5Y&feature=related[/media] [media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsF0wcRKDyw&feature=related[/media] I've posted this here before but It's very informative. [editline]26th August 2011[/editline] [QUOTE=Bat-shit;31958741]they'll never be smart enough to outsmart a harpoon[/QUOTE] But they are smart enough to tell humans when to throw their fishing nets.
[QUOTE=OvB;31958822]But they are smart enough to tell humans when to throw their fishing nets.[/QUOTE] well it's not like we need dolphins to fish efficiently. But I remember reading that Dolphins were also trained to locate sea mines and stuff, by the military. So yeah they are some smart fuckers.
didn't they attach bombs and stuff to them and make them sink ships?
[QUOTE=peaceful guy;31961109]didn't they attach bombs and stuff to them and make them sink ships?[/QUOTE] Another purpose for the dolphins! Dolphins are awesome!
avatar fits
[QUOTE=peaceful guy;31961109]didn't they attach bombs and stuff to them and make them sink ships?[/QUOTE] They're navy EOD dolphins. I think they gave the dolphin a beacon and it would go put it on anything that they thought was a bomb so the navy could further investigate to see if they wanted to blow it up.
[QUOTE=Dave_Parker;31957274]Only a matter of time before they develop religion.[/QUOTE] For all we know some probably worship a crashed alien spaceship. Some pods have probably been in some deep places, even if they don't go as deep as the whales, so Maker-only-knows knows what they've found. They certainly explore more of the sea than humans, since the water is their land.
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