How the marine mammals came to the aid of a suicidal girl off the waters of Los Angeles, California:
Maddalena Bearzi, president and co-founder of the Ocean Conservation Society, shared the account in her latest book, 'Dolphin Confidential: Confessions of a Field Biologist', an extract of which was published by National Geographic. She said that her team was following a school of bottlenose dolphins near the shore to study their behaviour, when one individual suddenly broke away from a feeding circle and set off into deeper waters.
The rest of the group set off in pursuit, much to the researchers' surprise who were used to tracking the animals back and forth within a few hundred metres of the beach. They followed the speeding dolphins to around three miles (5km) off the coast. ‘The dolphin group stopped, forming a sort of ring around a dark object in the water,’ she wrote.
The researchers radioed the lifeguards and lifted the girl out of the water before racing back to the closest harbour, Marina del Rey. Upon examination, one of the team said that the girl had severe hypothermia and they wrapped her in a blanket and hugged her to keep her warm.
They discovered that the girl, thought to be around 18, could speak little English and was on holiday. Emergency doctors later told the scientists that the girl would make a full recovery but had been found with a suicide note.
‘If we hadn’t found her, if the dolphins hadn’t led us offshore when they did, to that specific place, she would have died,’ Dr Bearzi wrote.
As the scientists were busy trying to save the girl, they had not continued to track the dolphins’ behaviour. ‘What might they have done with her if we hadn’t been there? Might they have tried to save her?’ she asked.
There are many accounts of dolphins scaring off sharks or guiding humans lost at sea to shore. Some scientists think that intelligent dolphins are merely curious when coming to a human's aid.
They also swim under struggling members of their own species to push them to the surface, so may be doing the same with humans in the water.
Dolphins have been observed coming to the rescue of a stranded pod of whales as well as rescuing a human that was bitten by a shark, in recent years. They seemingly drove the predators away so the man could be rescued.
In the Red Sea, a group of dolphins reportedly surrounded 12 divers who were lost for over 13 hours, repelling sharks living in the area. People aboard a rescue boat also reported that the animals seemed to be trying to show them where the stranded divers were.
However, many scientists do not think that the animals deliberately save humans and no evidence exists to prove otherwise.
‘That day I witnessed coastal bottlenose dolphins suddenly leave their feeding activities and head offshore. And in doing so, they led us to save a dying girl, some three miles offshore. Coincidence?’ Dr Bearzi wrote.
CASE STUDY: DOLPHINS PROTECT A SWIMMER FROM A SHARK
In April, British swimmer Adam Walker was joined by dolphins, seemingly to protect him from sharks on a gruelling eight hour swim across the Cook Strait near New Zealand.
He noticed a two metre shark-shaped figure swimming beneath him in the waters. The shark never attempted an attack, as a pod of dolphins soon came to his side, swimming alongside Mr Walker for an hour while he crossed the strait.
Whether they simply wanted to join in the fun or were actually actively participating in protecting Mr Walker from a possible shark attack is unclear, but the swimmer is grateful non-the-less. 'It would be a nice thought they were thinking, we will just help our pal get through,' Mr Walker said.
He was partaking in his sixth swim as part of the Ocean's Seven challenge in which participants attempt to swim what are considered the seven hardest long-oceans around the world, while raising money for the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society.
The athlete later added the following comment to his Facebook page after completing the swim: 'Yesterday I swam the 6th of the 'oceans seven' swims 'Cook Strait' in 8 hours 36 mins. But that doesn't tell the whole story rolling waves, big currents but more important than that a dream come true swimming with dolphins over an hour!! 'I'd like to think they were protecting me and guiding me home!!! This swim will stay with me forever,' he wrote.
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How humans treat dolphins - which is the superior species?
Mother dolphin commits suicide
after being separated from her albino dolphin calf by Japanese fishermen engaged in mass murder of dolphins
The yearly heartbreaking slaughter of whales and dolphins by Japanese fishermen
More on the Japanese massacre of dolphins http://ottersandsciencenews.blogspot.ca/2014/01/another-massacre-of-dolphins-by.html
Japanese are not the only ones engaging in this gory massacre of cetaceans - Europeans do too
http://ottersandsciencenews.blogspot.ca/2013/12/faroe-island-annual-blood-orgy-as-they.html
Video of humans slashing helpless dolphins in a sea turned red
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gydea-nUzFw
Japanese are not the only ones engaging in this gory massacre of cetaceans - Europeans do too
http://ottersandsciencenews.blogspot.ca/2013/12/faroe-island-annual-blood-orgy-as-they.html
Video of humans slashing helpless dolphins in a sea turned red
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gydea-nUzFw
David Attenborough: HUMANS ARE A PLAGUE ON EARTH
DOLPHIN MASSACRE GOES ON
- http://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/2014/01/29/taijis-dolphin-hunts-continue-1549
- http://globalnews.ca/news/1096243/slaughter-of-dolphins-begins-in-japans-taiji-cove-despite-criticism/
- http://www.seashepherd.org/news-and-media/2014/01/29/taijis-dolphin-hunts-continue-1549
- http://globalnews.ca/news/1096243/slaughter-of-dolphins-begins-in-japans-taiji-cove-despite-criticism/
Photo - Sea Shepherd Society
THE MASS MURDER OF DOLPHINS
More on dolphins on this blog -
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