Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Scientists are learning the basic building blocks of sperm whale language after years of effort !

Scientists are learning the basic building blocks of sperm whale language after years of effort

Time:2024-05-08 09:51:47 source:Worldly Window news portal

ROSEAU, Dominica (AP) — Scientists studying the sperm whales that live around the Caribbean island of Dominica have described for the first time the basic elements of how they might be talking to each other, in an effort that could one day help better protect them.

Like many whales and dolphins, sperm whales are highly social mammals and communicate by squeezing air through their respiratory systems to make strings of rapid clicks that can sound like an extremely loud zipper underwater. The clicks are also used as a form of echolocation to help them track their prey.

Scientists have been trying for decades to understand what those clicks might mean, with only minimal progress. While they still don’t know, they now think there are sets of clicks they believe make up a “phonetic alphabet” that the whales can use to build the very rough equivalent of what people think of as words and phrases.

Related information
  • Surprise! Zendaya unveils SECOND red carpet look at Met Gala as she wows in corseted off
  • How directors, distributors and devotees are struggling to keep Hong Kong cinema alive
  • Whakaari/White Island owners appealing criminal conviction
  • Release of kiwi into Te Papa
  • Party time! Lauren Sanchez celebrates her grand Met Gala debut while mingling with fashion A
  • Waymo's robotaxi service expands into Los Angeles, starting free rides in parts of the city
  • Police treat painting over of Auckland's K' Road rainbow crossing as hate crime
  • Kaimanawa horses adoptions threatened by cost of living
Recommended content
  • CFL's Chad Kelly suspended at least 9 games after investigation into ex
  • Labour's Rino Tirikatene retires from politics
  • TikTok: Federal judge postpones Donald Trump's ban on popular app
  • Health Ministry admits failings in handling contracts it awarded to firm with links to Peeni Henare
  • One Tech Tip: How to spot AI
  • One in critical condition after e