Incredible Video Shows Sperm Whales Come Together to Birth a Calf

United States News News

Incredible Video Shows Sperm Whales Come Together to Birth a Calf
United States Latest News,United States Headlines
  • 📰 ScienceAlert
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 201 sec. here
  • 5 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 84%
  • Publisher: 68%

The Best in Science News and Amazing Breakthroughs

The beautiful moment when an entire group of sperm whales came together to support the birth of a calf has, for the first time, been recorded in unprecedented detail.) family groups coming together in the Caribbean Sea off the coast of Dominica, taking turns to assist with the birth and help the newborn calf stay at the surface to take its first breaths.

"Our results suggest that kin and non-kin engaged in sustained, cooperative postnatal care, taking turns to support the newborn and maintain group cohesion, in contrast to historical kin-segregated foraging patterns,""These findings provide rare quantitative evidence of direct allocare in cetaceans and can lend support to the hypothesis that transient, structured cooperation during birth is a key mechanism sustaining complex sociality in sperm whales."Sperm whales are among the most social animals on the planet. Like other cetaceans, they live in groups; their survival is based on cooperation and collaboration.How that social structure works in a birthing context is not well understood. Prior to this event, just four sperm whale births had been reported in the last 60 years, and all of those were either anecdotal or observed within whaling contexts. Those reports suggested a level of community support during the birth of a new calf, but exactly what that entailed was never documented. In July 2023, Maalouf and his colleagues were conducting fieldwork off the coast of Dominica. The team of marine and computer scientists was working together as part of All seemed relatively normal until, at 9:50 am local time, the researchers encountered a group of 11 sperm whales congregating at the surface – a group consisting of two unrelated matrilines that usually forage separately. The whales' behavior was unusual enough that the scientists stopped and deployed their suite of observational instruments, including hydrophones for audio and drones for overhead video.At precisely 11:12 am, a pregnant whale known as Rounder started delivering her calf, a process that took 34 minutes from beginning to end. Other adult female whales positioned themselves around her in tight, synchronized formation. At 11:46 am, the scientists observed plumes of blood and the newborn whale, marking the moment of birth. Then a flurry of activity set in. Newborn sperm whales likely can't stay afloat on their own, so the entire extended group took turns keeping the calf at the surface to breathe until it was able to swim on its own. Meanwhile, other cetacean species turned up, seemingly to rubberneck. "The group rapidly transitioned to cohesive and highly active behavior; individuals took turns lifting the newborn, physically supporting and pushing it to the surface, consistent with supporting a negatively buoyant neonate. This phase continued for about an hour, during which time the entire unit remained tightly grouped," To make sense of what they had observed, the researchers turned to technology. They used machine learning and computer vision to identify individual whales, track their movements, and study how the group interacted throughout the birth. This analysis revealed that every single member of the 11-whale group took at least one turn supporting the calf in the hour following the birth, with about 96 percent of that time covered by a core group of four whales: Rounder, the new mother; Aurora, her half-sister; Ariel, a juvenile unrelated to Rounder; and Atwood, an older relative of Rounder. Meanwhile, the audio recordings show that the soundscape throughout the birth is intense and active. What the whales were saying, however, was not addressed in the current study, which focused on what the whales were doing.Even without an audio analysis, though, the study gives us new insight into the secret lives of these mysterious, but deeply intelligent, animals. "Our results provide quantitative evidence for the paradigm that calf survival, particularly around births, drives selection for the social bonds underpinning the complex social organization that has evolved in sperm whales," "These findings place the complexity of sperm whale birth behavior and coordination in comparative context with terrestrial mammals, including primates and humans, raising questions about the cognitive architectures and communication systems that support and mediate these behaviors."

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

ScienceAlert /  🏆 63. in US

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

Viral video shows trucks driving through foot of water on thawing Minnesota lakeViral video shows trucks driving through foot of water on thawing Minnesota lakeA viral video shows fishermen driving through approximately 12 inches of standing water atop the frozen surface of Lake of the Woods following recent warm weather.
Read more »

California meteor sighting becomes third in one week across USCalifornia meteor sighting becomes third in one week across USDashcam video shows meteor streaking across sky in Palo Alto
Read more »

Watch First Video Evidence of Sperm Whales Headbutting Each OtherWatch First Video Evidence of Sperm Whales Headbutting Each OtherThe researchers aren't sure yet why exactly, but the whales do seem to be having a good time.
Read more »

Animals gone wild: Incredible video of show bird escaping cheetahs at the zooAnimals gone wild: Incredible video of show bird escaping cheetahs at the zooToday's Video Headlines: 03/25/26
Read more »

Scientists captured female sperm whales on video working together during a birth to protect the calfScientists captured female sperm whales on video working together during a birth to protect the calfScientists have captured rare footage of a sperm whale giving birth, offering a window into the large mammals' behavior.
Read more »

Rare video of a sperm whale birth shows female animals working togetherRare video of a sperm whale birth shows female animals working togetherScientists have captured rare footage of a sperm whale giving birth, offering a window into the large mammals' behavior. The video taken in 2023 shows female whales from two family lines working together to lift the calf above the water during critical moments.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-04-01 01:53:40