Dolphins have names for each other and can call out for each other specifically.
Past studies have shown that individual
dolphins have a unique whistle, called a "signature whistle," that
they often use in big group settings, like when several pods of dolphins meet
at sea. The idea that dolphins have a name in the form of a whistle has been
around since the 1960s, and studies of captive dolphins have shown that the
animals are responsive to the whistles of dolphins they know.
But a new study takes the theory a step
further by asserting that a dolphin will respond when it hears the sound of its
own signature whistle, repeating that whistle back in a way that seems to say,
"Yup, I'm here—did you call my name?" explained Whitney Friedman, a
dolphin-behavior expert at the University of California, San Diego.
It's "compelling evidence" that
the dolphin indeed uses the sound as a name, according to the study, published
July 22 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The research was performed by a group of
scientists on a boat off eastern Scotland who joined up with a group of wild
dolphins. When one of the dolphins announced itself with its signature
whistle—the equivalent of "Joey!" for instance—the researchers
recorded that sound.
Later, the team played that same
"Joey!" call back to the dolphins, and a significant portion of the
time, the dolphin they called Joey responded with the same call—as if Joey was
saying, "Yup, I'm here."
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