The Daily Telegraph

Captive beluga whale learns how to speak like a dolphin

- By Sarah Knapton SCIENCE EDITOR

A BELUGA whale living in captivity with a pod of bottlenose dolphins has learned their language of whistles and clicks, scientists believe.

The four-year-old whale was moved to live with dolphins in the Koktebel dolphinari­um in Crimea in 2013 but, initially, struggled to communicat­e with her new tank mates.

However, within just a few months, she had begun to copy their whistles and clicks. Scientists think it could be the first example of an animal changing its vocalisati­ons in an attempt to “talk” to another species.

“Two months after the beluga’s introducti­on into a new facility, we found that it began to imitate whistles of the dolphins, whereas one type of its own calls seemed to disappear,” said Elena Panaova, a researcher at the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow.

“While the imitations of dolphin whistles were regularly detected

‘It began to imitate whistles of the dolphins, whereas one type of its own calls seemed to disappear’

among the beluga’s vocalisati­ons, we found only one case in which the dolphins produced short calls that resembled those of the beluga. This case may be an interestin­g example of interspeci­es communicat­ion.”

Dolphins have signature whistles, like names, which they use to call to each other.

After just a few months the beluga had stopped using its own calls and switched to dolphin signatures.

The researcher­s have so far recorded more than 90 hours of audio, where the whale communicat­es like the dolphins.

Beluga whales are highly intelligen­t and have been known to imitate people, other animals and other sounds they hear.

However, researcher­s say the beluga’s dolphin-like sounds are more interestin­g because she has given up speaking “beluga” to fit in with the group.

Although the group were originally afraid of the whale, even the dolphin calf now swims beside her.

The research conducted at the dolphinari­um was published in the journal Animal Cognition.

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