How smart are dolphins Lori Marino

In 1985, three researchers on
a dolphin-studying expedition

got a little bored.

To lighten things up, one pretended
to be Poseidon

by placing a seaweed garland on his head
and then throwing it into the ocean.

Moments later, a dolphin surfaced
with the seaweed crowning her head.

Sure, this could have been a coincidence,

but it’s also entirely possible that
the dolphin was mimicking the scientist.

That’s because dolphins are one
of the smartest animals species on Earth.

So exactly how smart are they?

Like whales and porpoises,

dolphins belong to the group
of aquatic mammals

known as cetaceans
who comprise 86 different species,

and share a common link with ungulates,
or hoofed animals.

Originally land mammals,

the first cetaceans entered the water
about 55 million years ago

as large predators with sharp teeth.

Then, a shift in ocean temperatures
about 35 million years ago

reduced the availability of prey.

One group of cetaceans who survived
this distruption,

the odontocetes, wound up smaller
with less sharp teeth,

but also larger and more complex brains

that allowed for complex
social relationships,

as well as echolocation to navigate
and communicate.

Jump ahead to the present,

and modern dolphins' brains are so large
that their encephalization quotient,

their brain size compared to the average
for their body size,

is second only to humans.

Dolphins have evolved to survive

through their ability to form
complex social networks

that hunt, ward off rivals,
and raise offspring together.

For example, one group of Florida dolphins

practices a sophisticated form
of cooperation to hunt fish.

A dolphin designated
as “the net-maker” kicks up mud

while another gives the signal

for the other dolphins to simultaneously
line up and catch the escaping fish.

Achieving a goal like this requires
deliberate planning and cooperation,

which, in turn, requires some form
of intentional communication.

Dolphins pass down their communication
methods and other skills

from generation to generation.

Different dolphin populations exhibit
variations in greetings,

hunting strategies,
and other behaviors.

This sort of cultural transmission
even extends to tool use.

One group of bottlenose dolphins
off the Australian coast

nicknamed The Dolphin Sponge Club,

has learned how to cover their rostrums
with sponges when rooting in sharp corals,

passing the knowledge
from mother to daughter.

Dolphins have even demonstrated
language comprehension.

When taught a language based on
whistles and hand gestures,

they not only understood
what the signals meant,

but that their order had meaning:

the difference between
bringing the ball to the hoop

and bringing the hoop to the ball.

So they were able to process two
of the main elements of human language:

symbols that stand
for objects and actions,

and syntax that governs
how they are structured.

Dolphins are also one of the few species
who pass the mirror test.

By recognizing themselves in mirrors,
they indicate physical self-awareness,

and research shows they can recognize
not just their bodies,

but also their own thoughts,
a property called metacognition.

In one study,
dolphins comparing two sounds

could indicate a same, different,
or uncertain response.

Just like humans,

they indicated uncertainty
more often with difficult trials,

suggesting they’re aware
of what they know,

and how confident they feel
about that knowledge.

But some of the most amazing things
about dolphins

are their senses of empathy, altruism,
and attachment.

The habit of helping injured individuals
extends across the species barrier

as evidenced by the many accounts

of dolphins carrying humans
to the surface to breathe.

And like us, dolphins mourn their dead.

When we consider all the evidence,

we may wonder why humans still hunt
dolphins for meat,

endanger them through fishing
and pollution,

or imprison them to perform tricks.

The ultimate question may not be
whether dolphins are intelligent

and complex beings,

but whether humans can empathize with them
enough to keep them safe and free.

1985 年,三位
研究海豚的研究人员

感到有些无聊。

为了让事情变得轻松,一个人
假装是波塞冬

,将海藻花环戴在头上
,然后扔进海里。

片刻之后,一只海豚
浮出水面,头上长着海藻。

当然,这可能是巧合,

但海豚也完全有
可能在模仿科学家。

那是因为海豚是
地球上最聪明的动物之一。

那么他们到底有多聪明?

像鲸鱼和鼠海豚一样,

海豚属于被称为鲸类
的水生哺乳动物群,

它们由 86 种不同的物种组成,

并且与有
蹄类动物或有蹄类动物有着共同的联系。

最初是陆地哺乳动物,大约 5500 万年前,

第一批鲸类动物

作为大型捕食者进入水中,并带有锋利的牙齿。

然后,大约 3500 万年前海洋温度的变化

减少了猎物的可用性。

在这次破坏中幸存下来的一组鲸目动物,
齿

鲸类,最终变得更小
,牙齿不那么锋利,

但大脑更大、更复杂

,可以进行复杂的
社会关系,

以及回声定位来导航
和交流。

跳到现在

,现代海豚的大脑是如此之大
,以至于它们的脑化商,

它们的大脑大小与身体大小的平均值相比

,仅次于人类。

海豚已经进化到

通过形成
复杂的社交网络

来捕猎、抵御对手
和共同抚养后代的能力来生存。

例如,一组佛罗里达海豚

采用一种复杂
的合作方式来捕捞鱼类。

一只被指定
为“织网者”的海豚会踢泥,

而另一只则发出信号

让其他海豚同时
排队并捕捉逃跑的鱼。

实现这样的目标需要
深思熟虑的计划和合作,

而这反过来又需要某种形式
的有意沟通。

海豚将它们的沟通
方式和其他技能

代代相传。

不同的海豚种群
在问候、

狩猎策略
和其他行为方面表现出不同。

这种文化传播
甚至延伸到了工具的使用上。 澳大利亚海岸外的

一组宽吻海豚

绰号“海豚海绵俱乐部”

,它们学会了
在尖锐的珊瑚中扎根时如何用海绵覆盖它们的讲台,从而

将知识
从母亲传给女儿。

海豚甚至表现出
语言理解能力。

当教授基于
口哨和手势的语言时,

他们不仅
理解信号的含义,

而且它们的顺序也有意义:

将球带到篮筐

和将篮筐带到球之间的区别。

因此,他们能够处理
人类语言的两个主要元素:

代表对象和动作的符号,

以及
支配它们结构的语法。

海豚也是少数
通过镜子测试的物种之一。

通过在镜子中认出自己,
他们表明了身体上的自我意识

,研究表明,他们不仅可以识别
自己的身体,

还可以识别自己的思想,
这种特性称为元认知。

在一项研究中,
海豚比较两种声音

可能表明相同、不同
或不确定的反应。

就像人类一样,

他们
在艰难的试验中更频繁地表示不确定性,

这表明他们
知道他们所知道的,

以及他们
对这些知识的信心。

但是关于海豚的一些最令人惊奇的事情

是它们的同理心、利他主义
和依恋感。

帮助受伤人员的习惯
跨越了物种的界限

,许多

关于海豚将人类
带到水面呼吸的记载就证明了这一点。

和我们一样,海豚也会哀悼他们的死者。

当我们考虑所有证据时,

我们可能想知道为什么人类仍然
为了肉而捕猎海豚,

通过捕鱼
和污染危及它们,

或者将它们囚禁以表演诡计。

最终的问题可能不是
海豚是否是聪明

而复杂的生物,

而是人类是否能够对它们产生
足够的同情,以保证它们的安全和自由。