Dolphin Intelligence, Facts, Pictures and Video

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Interesting Dolphin Facts

This lens just has stuff about Dolphins.

Dolphins locate objects by using sound. They bounce high pitched sounds off of objects to sense where they are. This is called "echolocation" and it is the way that bats 'see' as well. Dolphins have sophisticated hearing and navigate and hunt by using sound.

Like whales a Dolphin has a blow hole at the top of its head and must come up to breathe. So a Dolphin normally stays about 10-15 feet from the surface so it can come up to breathe often. However, a Dolphin can dive to over 500 feet if they want to.

A Dolphin can stay under water for 15 minutes or more.

Dolphins are carnivores and eat mainly fish and squid.

Dolphins have a complicated system of communication using clicks and sound. They coordinate their hunting and social group using sound.

A dolphin sleeps with half of its brain shut down and one eye closed!

Dolphins have been clocked as going as fast as 30 km/hr underwater!

They have been playing and communicating with people from ancient times and still do.

Dolphins Blowing Bubble Rings

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Dolphin Self-Recognition Mirrors Our Own

From Scientific American

[Image and article from here.]

Whether we're assessing our physiques or checking for food stuck in our teeth, most of us consult a mirror regularly to make sure we appear the way we expect. Though it may seem an unremarkable feat, the ability to recognize oneself in the mirror is actually exceptionally rare among animals. Indeed, only humans and their closest kin, the great apes, have shown this capacity, suggesting that factors specific to great apes and humans drove its evolution. Findings announced today in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, however, indicate that we and our primate relatives are not alone. According to the report, dolphins, too, exhibit mirror self-recognition.

To test for dolphin self-awareness, Diana Reiss of Columbia University and Lori Marino of Emory University exposed two bottlenose dolphins to reflective surfaces after marking the dolphins with black ink, applying a water-filled marker (sham-marking) or not marking them at all. The team predicted that if the dolphins which had prior experience with mirrors recognized their reflections, they would not show social responses; they would spend more time in front of the mirror when marked; and they would make their way over to the mirror more quickly to inspect themselves when marked or sham-marked. The experiments bore out all three predictions in both dolphin subjects. Moreover, the animals even selected the best reflective surface available to view their markings.

Intriguingly, whereas chimpanzees take interest in marks on fellow chimps in addition to marks on their own bodies, the dolphins focused on themselves. "Dolphins may pay less attention to marks on the bodies of companions because, unlike primates, they do not groom each other," the researchers write. "This difference makes our findings even more interesting because dolphins clearly are interested in marks on their own body despite the fact that they do not have a natural tendency toward social grooming."

The extent of dolphin self-awareness remains to be explored. But the fact that they have passed the mirror test means that self-recognition may result from large brains and advanced cognitive ability, as opposed to being a by-product of primate-specific factors. That dolphins and primates which differ profoundly in their brain organization and their evolutionary histories should both exhibit this unusual ability, the authors note, represents "a striking case of cognitive convergence"

Dolphin Intelligence Sample

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Dolphin Information

Whistles with Dolphins: Scientific American
Trailblazing our knowledge of aquatic minds, Diana Reiss uses science to fight for dolphin welfare.
BBC - Wildlife Finder - Peale's dolphin (video, facts and news)
Peale's dolphins are a little-known species that inhabit the waters around the southern tip of South America. They live in small family units of 3-8.
BBC - Wildlife Finder - Common bottlenose dolphin (video, facts and news)
Common bottlenose dolphins are widespread, active and very acrobatic. They are extremely sociable and sometimes hunt their prey (fish, squid and shrimp) in teams.
News Blog: Are Whales Smarter Than We Are?
Cetacean brains, such as those of dolphins (left) and humpback whales (right), have even more cortical convolutions and surface area than human brains do. Does that mean they're smarter?
Figure from " Cetaceans Have Complex Brains for Complex Cognition
Does Military Sonar Kill Marine Wildlife?: Scientific American
The frequency used in military testing could be harmful to some animals
Dolphin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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