• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Navy Dolphins’ Video Food Diaries Give Chaotic Insight Into How These Animals Hunt

August 19, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

Incredible footage showing the ways in which dolphins hunt from the POV of riding on the side of one’s face is the rollercoaster we didn’t know we needed to go on. The footage, filmed by US Navy dolphins, was made possible thanks to some mavericks over in San Diego Bay who decided to strap on some cameras and see what they got up to.

Advertisement

Being Navy dolphins, these animals are usually kept in captivity but they are allowed out on some wild jaunts in the open ocean, and it was for this that they were enrolled in a study published in PLOS ONE. The project involved attaching cameras to six bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) with the lens pointing at the animals’ snoots to see how they went about hunting and eating for six months.

Not only did the cameras capture the dolphins’ best angle, but they also got recordings of the many squeaks, buzzes, and clicks they were emitting when in pursuit of some living dinner. This revealed that dolphins in search of a meal would click at intervals of 20 to 50 milliseconds, but upon homing in on their prey would crescendo in a buzz and a squeal.

Squealing continued while the dolphins wrestled the fish into their mouths and down their throats. Any escapees were pursued by the dolphins who would continue their buzzing and squealing.

Dolphins were also seen expanding their throats when eating and if fish managed to slip through their jaws, they seemed perfectly capable of sucking them right back in again.

Advertisement

Dolphins have historically enjoyed a rather PG reputation despite being plenty capable of violence (just ask this porpoise), but the study’s footage revealed their meaner side as they appeared to flare their lips to show all of their teeth shortly before capturing prey.

As for prey choice, on their adventures, the Navy dolphins were filmed capturing a wide range of fish, but curiously one showed themselves to have a penchant for venomous sea snakes. Our gastronomically adventurous cetacean gulped down eight yellow-bellied sea snakes (Hydrophis platurus) in a behavior that’s never been seen before in these animals and, fortunately, didn’t seem to make it sick.

dolphin hunting video
If nobody’s yet optioned a Come Dine With Me with dolphin cams, may we suggest you do. Image credit: Ridgway et al 2022 PLOS ONE, CC BY 4.0

While the insights and accompanying footage represent a unique and original way to study dolphins’ diets, the findings are limited in that they are based on Navy animals rather than wild ones. However, the researchers are confident that their approach can be altered to work for wild dolphins, too.

Advertisement

“The camera placements that we used could be employed with small cameras and suction cup tags to observe feeding in wild dolphins,” they explained in their paper. “This would give a better understanding of feeding and nutrition in threatened populations.”

My Dolphin Diary 2: Cetaceans Gone Wild? You can count us in.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Tik Tok, influencers on the clock
  2. Athletics-Tamberi hopes to finish season on a high in Zurich
  3. Tumblr’s subscription product Post+ enters open beta after much scrutiny from users
  4. Stories as a service: Storyteller lets anyone add Stories to their own apps or website

Source Link: Navy Dolphins' Video Food Diaries Give Chaotic Insight Into How These Animals Hunt

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Microscopic Engine Is Hottest In The World – Just Like The Core Of The Sun
  • Gerrymandering Explained: How Math Is Used For Political Gain To Win Elections
  • The Longest Sperm On Earth Is 20 Times The Animals’ Body Size, But Whose Is It?
  • Ancient Bacterial DNA Has Been Recovered From A 1.1-Million-Year-Old Mammoth
  • On Sunday, 7 Billion People Will See The Moon Turn Red. But Who Will See The Blue Band?
  • 670-Year-Old Manuscript On “Unexplained Phenomena” Is Bad News For Believers In The Shroud Of Turin
  • What’s The Largest Egg Of Any Animal? Clue: It Doesn’t Come From An Ostrich
  • Snowy Albatross, The Largest Flying Bird By Wingspan, Is A Master Of Long-Haul Flight
  • Why Have Some Gel Nail Polishes Just Been Banned In Europe?
  • Beyond The Lab: How The World’s Largest Lab Science Conference Is Changing Lives
  • Meet Madame Berthe’s Mouse Lemur, The World’s Smallest Primate
  • 40 Years Since Titanic’s Wreck Was Found, Watch The Rare Footage Of Its Discovery
  • Watch As An Asteroid The Size Of A Brachiosaurus Passes 0.0014599 AU From Earth Tomorrow
  • The Crypt Of Civilization Was Sealed 85 Years Ago. It Won’t Be Opened Again Until The Year 8113 CE
  • New Zealand’s Population Just Jumped From 5 Million To 695 Billion Overnight – Well, Sort Of
  • Welcome To Earth’s Newest Nature Reserve: Protection Of The Great Maya Forest
  • New Liquid Crystal COVID-19 Test Could Be Quicker And More Accurate Than Lateral Flow
  • Distant Dwarf Planet Quaoar Might Have More Moons Than We Thought – Or Yet Another “Impossible” Ring
  • Most Detailed Geologic Map Of The US To Date Lets You Explore Country’s Ancient History
  • Alien Life Could Be Found By Simply Changing The Shape Of Telescopes
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version