The Culture of Cetaceans
A RECENT STUDY OF HUMPBACK WHALES shows that the cetaceans learn new hunting techniques from one another, a form of cultural transmission like that underlying much of human behavior. Published earlier this year in Science, the study, by biologists from Scotland’s University of St. Andrews, England’s Anglia Ruskin University and the Whale Center of New England, focused on a community of humpback whales feeding on Stellwagen Bank, off New England. The whales were forced to find new prey after herring stocks—their preferred food—crashed in the early 1980s. The whales’ new strategy—hitting the water with their tails (called “lobtailing”) while hunting a different prey, the sand lance—has spread through the population.A new storymap connects the dots between extreme weather and climate change and illustrates the harm these disasters inflict on communities and wildlife.
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