Google – AFP,
By Mariette Le Roux (AFP), 7 Aug 2013
![]() |
A
bottlenose dolphin swims off the coast of Rangiroa, in French Polynesia
(AFP/File, Valerie Macon)
|
PARIS,
France — Bottlenose dolphins can remember each other's signature whistles for
more than 20 years, a study said Wednesday -- the longest social memory ever
observed in an animal.
Elephants
have long been credited with the animal kingdom's most prodigious memory, but
evidence for that was anecdotal, said the study's author Jason Bruck of the
University of Chicago's Institute for Mind and Biology.
Bruck
claims to have compiled the first study showing social recognition in an animal
persisting beyond two decades -- possibly "the longest pure memory of any
kind in a non-human species".
For the
study published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,
Bruck worked with 43 captive dolphins at six zoos and aquariums in the United
States and Bermuda, collecting whistle recordings he played to them over
speakers underwater.
Previous research
had shown that dolphins design unique signature whistles to identify
themselves, and answer when called by "name".
![]() |
Baby
bottlenose dolphins are shown at a
zoo in Duisburg, western Germany in 2011
(DPA/AFP/File, Roland Weihrauch)
|
Bruck
played dolphins the recordings of signature whistles from those they had once
shared a tank with, as well as the calls of complete strangers.
"Dolphins
got bored quickly listening to signature whistles from dolphins they don't
know," he said in a statement.
But
familiar calls often elicited an immediate response.
"When
they hear a dolphin they know, they often quickly approach the speaker playing
the recording," said Bruck. "At times they will hover around, whistle
at it, try to get it to whistle back."
In one
case, Bruck played the whistle of a female dolphin named Allie, who lives at
Brookfield Zoo in the US, for Bailey, a female now in Bermuda. The pair had
last lived together in the Florida Keys when Allie was two and Bailey four --
but Bailey clearly recognised the call.
The
reaction was not affected by how long the animals had lived together, nor their
sex or kinship status, the biologist said.
"I was
expecting five, maybe 10 years. Memory for over 20 years just has not been
systematically shown in animals so I was amazed by what I found," he told
AFP.
In the
wild, bottlenose dolphins have an average life expectancy of about 20 years,
though some can survive for 45 years or longer.
Bruck said
the study revealed a social memory "very consistent" with that of
humans.
It may even
be more long-lasting than facial recognition abilities by humans whose faces
change over time while dolphin whistles remain the same.



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