cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/2712557
For the past 18 months, orcas have been attacking boats and yachts in the Mediterranean Sea near the Strait of Gibraltar. A new report of an orca boat attack in the North Sea near Scotland is a surprising development.
Itās possible that the orcas are displaying ācultural evolutionā and other pods are learning behaviors from one another Scientists long assumed that humans were the only animals capable of ācultural evolutionāāthat is, learned behaviors developed beyond the innate skills gifted to us by genetic evolution. But for a few decades now, the animal kingdom has been providing evidence to the contrary.
Monkeys and whales have shown a particular gift for cultural evolution, and other animals outside the class Mammalia have shown simpler forms of collective learning and adaptation.
Now, the majestic orca (Orcinus orca) is under scrutiny for the same kind of behavior, as boats in the Mediterranean near the Strait of Gibraltarāand surprisingly, off the coast of Scotland in the North Seaāappear to be specifically targeting boats. Although this behavior was well-known in the Iberian orca population, itās a shocking development that orcas seemingly unaffiliated with the Mediterranean pod are exhibiting similar behaviors.
āIād be reluctant to say it cannot be learned from [the southern population],ā Conor Ryan, a scientist whoās studied orca pods off the Scottish coast, told The Guardian. āItās possible that this āfadā is leapfrogging through the various pods/communities.ā
Despite being known as ākiller whales,ā orcas are actually members of the dolphin family and are highly sociable, using complex vocalizations to communicate with one another. The learn matrilineally, meaning āgrandmotherā orcas (which can live for 80 years or more) become matriarchs of their pods and pass on vital hunting skills.
With three boats sunk and upwards of 100 others damaged in Iberia, scientists think that this behavior may come from one such āgrandmotherā orca named White Gladis. The thought is that she may have survived a traumatic event earlier in life involving a boat, and has since taught her pod how to attack them. Itās also possible that these attacks are timed with Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) migrations, and the orcas perceive boats as competition for food.
Of course, humans are not necessarily innocent victims in these orca hit-and-runs, as boats cause noise pollution and other hazards for the creatures and other marine life. But, regardless, how exactly did an orca in the North Sea learn this seemingly isolated behavior from 2,000 miles away? Some scientists think that highly mobile pods could be capable of teaching these boat-destroying tricks to individuals in other pods.
So, will orcas always be on the hunt for boats and yachts of all shapes and sizes? Well, not necessarily. As seemingly easy as it was for the orcas to pick up this hunting trick, itās possible that this ācultural evolutionā will disappear just as rapidly. Similars shifts have happened before. For example, the website Salon reports that, a few years back, bottlenose dolphins were carrying sea sponges on their noses of the coast of Australia. But as quickly as this āfadā appeared, it became scarce, and soon disappeared entirely.
Scientists donāt know how long this particular ācultural evolutionā will stick around. But considering our bang-up job protecting the planet, it almost feels like thereās a measure of justified cosmic karma at play here.
Apparently we need /s tags on Lemmy too lol
Edit: not sure why the downvotes are flowing, this commenter above was clearly being facetious š¤·
People downvote when they feel someone is wrong, but cannot put it into words. Itās common on Reddit and since many people here come from Reddit, itās likely common here too.
As for me, I was not being facetious, I was stating what will obviously happen if the āfadā doesnāt disappear. I donāt care about votes and donāt care about groupthink, honesty is preferable every time.
People who downvoted were obviously in āwhales are sacredā mode and couldnāt bring themselves to think that some whales are predators who kill to eat and compete when needed, and can be dangerous to humans if they program themselves a bit wrong.
P.S.
I knew of the Iberian orca situation for a year or something, itās not news to me.
I donāt think it has to do with a āwhales are sacredā mentality. Humans with our modern technologies are invasive, loud and destructive. We travel across the whole world in loud, dangerous, harmful and polluting vehicles. We also take from this planet far more than we return with absolutely no respect for the complex and diverse yet fragile ecosystems we live within.
Here we have a species of dolphin that are working together to try and stop another invasive species from threatening their home. Humans have a long and rich history with the sea but we are still land animals that are invading and disrupting their home and way of life. These Orcas are defending themselves. As humans, our reaction should be to acknowledge their right to defend themselves and leave their home alone. We should not escalate by introducing even more noise and substances. Instead it would be wiser to look within ourselves and see that our luxuries should not be causing so much distress to other sentient life.
I personally believe the Orcas and any other wild life have the right to defend their home just like any indigenous people who want to live in balance with nature. We should be stewards of this planet and respect the life it gave us by respecting the life around us. We should not be waging active or passive wars on everything above or below the waters.
I see it differently.
I donāt assign human reasoning to orcas. They have a culture but itās comparable to the culture in a pack of wolves. An exceptionally smart wolf may intuitively guess that cars are created by humans, but most wolves probably donāt, and if you showed them welding a car together, they woulnāt become any wiser from it.
The average orca is likely incapable of understanding that a boat is a human creation, that humans use boats to travel and tranport goods, or that humans are an incredibly invasive species (which I agree we are), or that humans are threatened by leaks in their boat.
From their viewpoint, a human on board is more likely part of the boat, and a human in water would be considered a freak type of seal. Only upon interaction with humans (e.g. āthere is some creature on the pier that made a motion and I got a fish - I will study it more closely because it could have more tasty fishā) would they learn to reason about humans as creatures.
What I see, are not orcas working together to stop an invasive species, but one species of whale, often found hunting other whales, trying to hunt a plastic sailboat in great confusion. Itās not good to them, itās not good for sailors, if they try with a fishing trawler theyāll get wounded by a propellerā¦
ā¦itās like 5-ton dogs chasing a 15-ton car. One can hope it stops, or not hope and think how to make it stop.
We may never know the true intentions behind the attacks because we arenāt Orcas. That should not mean we must escalate the situation between humans and orcas. Using more noise and susbtances to fend off one species may have unintended affects in other species or ecosystems.
If they are targetting objects that are luxuries of humans (for example a boat or yatch) then we humans should consider just not participating in those activities. We should not be introducing more sophisticated solutions which may come with even more unforeseen consequences. In this case, I believe less is more. The less we humans invade their space, the less likely either human or orca is to be injured or killed. If this is just an Orca cultural fad then it may mean this destructive behavior will disappear quickly if they are left alone.
Human enjoyment or satisfaction does not have to come from distressing or endangering other life. Sentient or not.
Regardless of Orca intention or perspective, Iām still rooting for the Orcas. Itās their home. We humans have caused way more damage to their homes than they have to our boats and yachts. Their damage to our stuff is totally justified in my eyes.