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| Dolphin
Identity |
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Having
worked with many different terrestrial and marine animals for over
25 years, it is always interesting to me the perceptions and questions
people have regarding animals and behavior, especially dolphins,
one of the most popular of animal species.
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Some
of the common misperceptions are simply because of the way dolphins
look - since they always have a "smile" on their face,
they must always be happy, benevolent, and gentle. Some have to
do with how intelligent dolphins are - we have often read of their
large brains and superior intelligence, smarter some say, than man.
Many perceptions are created from the repeated telling of anecdotal
stories of other people's experiences with these mammals.
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People
have a tendency to impose their own standards onto animals in many
ways. An animal that looks "mean" - let's say a shark
or snake
- is perceived to be that way. While an animal that looks friendly
and even cute - like a chimpanzee
or hippopotamus
- is perceived differently. Certainly, any one of those four animals
I just mentioned has the capability of harming you given a chance
- the hippo or chimp probably the more likely of the four to actually
do so. I am often asked if the animal I am using in an educational
presentation will bite or if a particular species is "friendly".
In the wild, all animals behave in the interest of their own survival
and, many times, the survival of their kin. Many animals - growing
up in a zoo or other professional environment - are able to be taught
that they have nothing to fear from humans, and do not need to act
defensive or aggressive to meet their needs. Dolphins are one of
the species that are particularly adapted to this type of conditioning.
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Virtually
all of the dolphins I have known at SeaWorld appear very interested
in what us humans are doing in and around the pool, regardless of
the amount of interaction they have already received from those
same humans or the number of other dolphins they have around them.
Talk about social animals!
In
the wild though, this behavior can be detrimental to both humans
and the dolphins themselves. When any animal in the wild is habituated
to the presence, touch or feeding from humans, it removes the natural
fear a wild animal needs of humans. Wild dolphins have been known
to become aggressive towards humans, ignore their own offspring,
become dependant on the food fed by humans, eat unhealthy and unnatural
foods, and trust humans who have then done cruel things to them.
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The
"smile" a dolphin seems to portray is obviously just a
physical characteristic, albeit one that has the effect of eliciting
a warm, fuzzy feeling from us humans. Dolphins in the wild emit
the same wide range of behaviors most other animals do as well -
foraging for food, play, especially when young, aggression (both
intraspecific, within their own species, and interspecific, between
themselves and other species), breeding, caring for young, etc.
When researchers have "tested" dolphins for measurements
of intelligence, dolphins always seem to do well and they definitely
have amazing physiological capabilities for their aquatic existence.
It has always been exceptionally difficult if not impossible, however,
to accurately measure and compare levels of intelligence, even just
between humans! Dolphins don't readily figure out how to jump over
even a low barrier, whereas a child most certainly would. Humans
have figured out how to fly, but have not yet come close to the
underwater capabilities of marine animals such as echolocation,
speed and agility.
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Just
like people, dolphins have very distinct personalities. Some are
dominant and shrewd, some are timid and docile, while others are
astute and gentle, and still others are aggressive, yet flighty.
No two dolphins are the same...but I would say that of any species
with which I have worked and any two people I have met. Just as
we don't like to be categorized or "labeled", so too I
think we should be careful with animals - we are all supremely adapted
and "designed" to flourish within our niche.
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