In a sperm whale birth recorded in more intimate detail than ever before, local whales huddled around the mother and lifted the calf to the surface.
The female sperm whale giving birth was aided by 10 other sperm whales, almost all female, but not all kin. The footage makes clear that, like humans, sperm whales benefit from cooperation, so much so that the instinct to help transcends family barriers.
.“Not only did we capture such an amazing dataset, but we actually knew each of these whales,” says marine biologist David Gruber with Project CETI, a nonprofit based in the Caribbean island Dominica dedicated to sperm whale research. That made it possible to tease out the role of each whale in the birthing process. Observing the birth of a whale is extremely rare, and there have been only a handful of scientific studies that describe a sperm whale birth. While scientists had seen sperm whales helping each other during birth before, none of those accounts were recorded on video. In 2023, off the coast of Dominica, Gruber and colleagues used two aerial drones to record the 34-minute birthing process. The group of whales surrounded the laboring mother, named Rounder. After delivery, the group took turns lifting the newborn to the surface for hours, so it could breathe air until it could swim on its own. Adult female sperm whales act as a raft for the newborn, which is prone to sinking in the first few hours after birth. This is the first video of sperm whale birth captured by scientists.The team computationally defined each whale’s position in stills from the footage over time. A team member with the most knowledge of the whales then tracked which whale was which. The team was then able to see how each whale’s role in the birth related to kin relationships. The gathering included groups belonging to two different female lines that do not typically spend time together. Analyzing the video revealed that until several hours after the birth, the whales from the two groups fully mixed together, and they all participated in supporting the newborn at some point. The four whales that maintained the most consistent contact with the calf included the calf’s mother, aunt, an elder kin member and a whale from outside the kin group. “The baby sperm whale is negatively buoyant, and so it would have sunk,” says Gruber, which is why it is so important to have cooperative care following the birth. Similar behaviors involving pushing newborns to the surface has been observed in killer whales, belugas and other cetaceans. Gruber says this behavior potentially goes back to when those species shared a common ancestor.), which sometimes antagonize sperm whales. Different sounds being associated with the birth is not surprising, says behavioral marine biologist Denise Herzing, who heads the Wild Dolphin Project, a nonprofit in Jupiter, Fla., focused on Atlantic spotted dolphins . “Marine mammals in general, have specific sounds during specific behavioral contexts.” The studies suggest that high-stakes situations like the birth of a calf have driven these whales to evolve cooperative instincts. Herzing thinks this is spot on. “We see different alliances of dolphins grouping into bigger groups to fight off a predator or to mate,” she says.Gruber says his colleagues weren’t looking for a whale birth when they chanced upon one. But they were fortunate enough to be in the right place at the right time with enough equipment. And the whales seemed to include them in the event, Gruber says. “They literally carried the baby right past the front of our boat.” It took cooperation from the human team, too — in the form of getting footage, developing methods, and mapping knowledge of the whales’ relationships — to share the experience of seeing the birth with the world. “It was a very profound experience for all of us.”
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