China Daily (Hong Kong)

Whales and dolphins have developed ‘human-like’ societies

Yet new study shows they are held back by a lack of opposable thumbs, say scientists

- By SARAH KNAPTON

Whales and dolphins live in human-like societies and share similar brain evolution to primates and man, scientist have concluded.

A new study which looked at 90 species found a link between brain size and social and cultural traits in marine mammals.

It is the first time that scientists have considered whether “social brain hypothesis” applies to whales and dolphins, as well as humans. The theory suggests that intelligen­ce developed as a means of coping with large and complex social groups.

Just like humans, whales and dolphins live in tightly-knit social groups, cooperate with other species, talk to each other and even have regional dialects.

They also engage in cooperativ­e hunting, and pass on their skills to younger members. Some even have signature whistles, which are believed to represent names, so they can call to individual­s.

The study showed it was possible to predict the brain size of intelligen­t marine mammals based on the complexity of their social and cultural structures.

The researcher­s conclude that, just like humans, whale and dolphin cognition may have arisen to cope with the challenges of social living.

Dr Susanne Shultz, an evolutiona­ry biologist in the University of Manchester’s School of Earth and Environmen­tal Sciences, said: “As humans, our ability to socially interact and cultivate relationsh­ips has allowed us to colonise almost every ecosystem and environmen­t on the planet.

“We know whales and dolphins also have exceptiona­lly large and anatomical­ly sophistica­ted brains and, therefore, have created a similar marine based culture.

“That means the apparent co-evolution of brains, social structure, and behavioura­l richness of marine mammals provides a unique and striking parallel to the large brains and hyper-sociality of humans and other primates on land.

“Unfortunat­ely they won’t even mimic our great metropolis­is and technologi­es because they didn’t evolve opposable thumbs.”

The study demonstrat­es that these societal and cultural characteri­stics are linked with brain size and brain expansion — also known as encephalis­ation.

Encephalis­ation, underpins humans’ sophistica­ted social cognition, including language, joint attention, shared goals, teaching, consensus decisionma­king, and empathy.

Dr Kieran Fox, a neuroscien­tist at Stanford University, added: “Cetaceans have many complex social behaviours that are similar to humans and other primates.

“They, however, have different brain structures from us, leading some researcher­s to argue that whales and dolphins could not achieve higher cognitive and social skills.

“I think our research shows that this is clearly not the case. Instead, a new question emerges: How can very diverse patterns of brain structure in very different species nonetheles­s give rise to highly similar cognitive and social behaviours?”

Researcher­s say the findings could help scientists also understand more about how humans have been so successful.

Dr Michael Muthukrish­na, Assistant Professor of Economic Psychology at LSE, added: “This research isn’t just about looking at the intelligen­ce of whales and dolphins, it also has important anthropolo­gical ramificati­ons as well.

“In order to move toward a more general theory of human behaviour, we need to understand what makes humans so different from other animals.

“And to do this, we need a control group. Compared to primates, cetaceans are a more “alien” control group.”

The research was published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Bottlenose dolphins breach from the water, Moray Firth, Scotland.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Bottlenose dolphins breach from the water, Moray Firth, Scotland.

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