The Insane Biology of: The Sperm Whale

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  • Опубліковано 9 гру 2022
  • Watch this video ad-free on Nebula: nebula.tv/videos/realscience-...
    New streaming platform: watchnebula.com/
    Patreon: / realscience
    Twitter: / stephaniesamma
    Instagram: / stephaniesammann
    Credits:
    Narrator/Writer: Stephanie Sammann
    Writer: Lorraine Boissoneault
    Editor: Dylan Hennessy (www.behance.net/dylanhennessy1)
    Editor: David O'Sullivan
    Illustrator: Elfy Chiang (www.elfylandstudios.com/)
    Illustrator/Animator: Kirtan Patel (kpatart.com/illustrations)
    Animator: Mike Ridolfi (www.moboxgraphics.com/)
    Sound: Graham Haerther (haerther.net)
    Thumbnail: Simon Buckmaster ( / forgottentowel )
    Producer: Brian McManus ( / realengineering )
    Special Thanks To:
    Dr. Joy Reidenberg
    Susan Bird
    Tom Mustill - and be sure to check out his new book How to Speak Whale
    www.grandcentralpublishing.co...
    Imagery courtesy of Getty Images
    References:
    [1] www.fisheries.noaa.gov/specie...
    [2] www.biosciences-labs.bham.ac.u...
    [3] www.orcaireland.org/deep-divi...
    [4] www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
    [5] manoa.hawaii.edu/exploringour....
    [6] www.eurocbc.org/Gas-bubble%20l...
    [7] www.nature.com/scitable/blog/...
    [8] wildwhales.org/speciesid/whal...
    [9] academic.oup.com/biolinnean/a...
    [10] www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...
    [11] journals.plos.org/plosone/art...
    [12] royalsocietypublishing.org/do...
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,5 тис.

  • @realscience
    @realscience  Рік тому +369

    Be sure to check out the Field Notes episode that goes along with this video on Nebula! In this episode we talk to the experts about what its like to study - and dissect - such massive creatures, and what its like to be crushed by one while kayaking. Watch it by signing up to the bundle deal at curiositystream.com/realscience

    • @khango6138
      @khango6138 Рік тому +2

      Field Nymphs is an amazing idea for a series, I gotta go watch it now! This is right up my alley, the human story behind every scientific discovery, conservation success, and, heart break.

    • @supermaster2012
      @supermaster2012 Рік тому +2

      It's not really a discount if it's always been that price since Nebula was released to the public. In fact, there is federal legislation against this kind of false advertisement.

    • @kathleenmann7311
      @kathleenmann7311 Рік тому +1

      Life sucks sometimes. It’s a good time to have a reality conversation.

    • @realscience
      @realscience  Рік тому +7

      @@supermaster2012 it is a discount right now for the holidays

    • @kevinderrick2787
      @kevinderrick2787 Рік тому

      Honest question- Do you do these videos in imperial units?

  • @Pure_Malevolence
    @Pure_Malevolence 10 місяців тому +1061

    The idea of a sperm whale, that is potentially sentient, diving down and just sonic blasting the shit out a giant squid is epic.

    • @anxiousseal556
      @anxiousseal556 7 місяців тому +68

      Can't wait until they goes through next step of evolution and started making memes

    • @viktorbirkeland6520
      @viktorbirkeland6520 5 місяців тому +11

      That was actually some incredibly great insight, the stuff about "they stay in one place, relatively still, so there is a possibility they are ambush predators"
      I'd never even considered it, the whole teeth not to hold with, and a whale as big as a building being an ambush predator!

    • @zombieGI
      @zombieGI 4 місяці тому +32

      They are all sentient, i believe the correct term is self aware. And that seems to be more and more a matter of degree not what we consider an actual threshold. I think that should be self evident just by studying humans alone

    • @Pure_Malevolence
      @Pure_Malevolence 4 місяці тому +11

      @@zombieGI You are correct I was entirely to focused on the “sonic blasting the shit” part. My b.

    • @althechicken9597
      @althechicken9597 3 місяці тому

      B GONE
      T H O T

  • @cameronsitton501
    @cameronsitton501 Рік тому +277

    Imagine you're swimming and some whale yells "YO GARY" to get a buddy's attention and you just get shredded

    • @tnhnoztel
      @tnhnoztel Місяць тому

      lol

    • @macemaster
      @macemaster 26 днів тому +5

      they seem to know what their sonic blasts can do and they show no desire to harm divers with their sounds. just dont go diving in a squid costume

    • @gamingcreatesworlddd2425
      @gamingcreatesworlddd2425 10 днів тому

      😂that would be disastrr​@@macemaster

  • @CaioRodrigues001
    @CaioRodrigues001 11 місяців тому +443

    Deepest diver, loudest screams, biggest brains, biggest toothed predator and idk how many other records broken! Truly an amazing creature

    • @robotdeer
      @robotdeer 9 місяців тому +15

      Biggest nose!

    • @BionicMAGA-xi3uy
      @BionicMAGA-xi3uy 9 місяців тому +12

      Biggest head.

    • @magpye5623
      @magpye5623 6 місяців тому +3

      And a terrifying one! God these guys are fascinating but also so scary

    • @Brandon-br7tc
      @Brandon-br7tc 4 місяці тому +2

      Ass well as one of the most oddest names in the animal kingdom lol

    • @pausedforcyberbullying_
      @pausedforcyberbullying_ 3 місяці тому +1

      Put a camera on them so we can see where they go😢..

  • @ohedd
    @ohedd Рік тому +432

    The bit about whales possibly learning and conveying strategies for evading whalers is extremely interesting. I also wonder if the intelligence of the sperm whale and the intelligence of the squid came as a result of an arms race with each other. If so, sperm whale intelligence appear to have evolved more in the direction of human intelligence; where we evolved abilities to communicate and organize and take advantage of collective intelligence. By contrast the squid, who's a solitary animal, evolved incredible spatial intelligence and abilities to solve complex cognitively demanding tasks.

    • @katebretusch3752
      @katebretusch3752 10 місяців тому +22

      It IS interesting. Like monkeys eyesight and snakes venom

    • @itsm3th3b33
      @itsm3th3b33 9 місяців тому +4

      That sounds like made up BS. 😅

    • @psychedashell
      @psychedashell 9 місяців тому +25

      I think it has more to do with the groupings of animal they belong to.
      All Odontoceti are super-smart with high level teamwork skills, killer whales literally formed alliances with humans in which the killer whales locate the bigger whales, the humans killed the bigger whales and tributed the killer whales with choice cuts for their help.
      All Cephalopods are extremely inteligent puzzle solvers with octopus solving mazes, bottles and other human made challenges.

    • @jainin7682
      @jainin7682 9 місяців тому +2

      I wouldnt parallel evolution with the human arms race. Sperm whales are situated in the position of predator in this situation by default due to thier biology the advanced communication isnt needed to help them hunt, as far as I can tell they do just fine solo although communication may be useful to relay where there are alot if prey. Also, the ease with which they hunt (probably by stunning thier prey with sonar, makes it seem to almost not even feel as much like hunting.. more like.. grazing😅

    • @thatpandaz6094
      @thatpandaz6094 9 місяців тому +2

      ​@@itsm3th3b33Well, a hypothesis are always made up bs drawn from logic that sometimes turn out to be true

  • @RobinCrusoe1952
    @RobinCrusoe1952 Рік тому +4044

    I hope when, if, we decipher their language the first thing we should communicate is how profoundly sorry we are for almost bringing about their extermination.

    • @omarcarrero3623
      @omarcarrero3623 Рік тому

      If they were able to have human level of language skills, then we should tell them how ashamed they should feel that them being such big, powerful and intelligent were brought close to extinction by a bunch of hairless apes

    • @kyleorr533
      @kyleorr533 Рік тому +350

      Maybe…but even though their language may be more complex than ours, it doesn’t mean that they have the same concepts as us such as remorse. Would be cool to have some semblance of a dialogue with other creatures though.

    • @mollydooker9636
      @mollydooker9636 Рік тому +205

      @@kyleorr533 I think an apology would be more to assuage our guilt as humans. However I agree they may not grasp remorse as an emotion or they may not care an iota for our feelings. But neither would it surprise me if they understand the full gamut of human emotions and have a few additional ones of their own.

    • @geronimo9193
      @geronimo9193 Рік тому +21

      Evolution maybe they should try it

    • @AngryDad.
      @AngryDad. Рік тому +10

      Lmao

  • @daniell1483
    @daniell1483 Рік тому +4038

    I don't know why, but the idea of making a Rosetta Stone for the sperm whale's language really hits me in the feels. For so long, humans have been wondering if we are alone in the universe and spent so much time looking into space to try and find neighbors, when in reality we should have been looking into the oceans. Sperm whales and orca both have complex languages, and I wouldn't be one bit surprised if we found out one or both are sapient, and sentient, creatures. I honestly can't wait for this teased video.

    • @infinitemonkey917
      @infinitemonkey917 Рік тому +179

      We already know that they are sapient and sentient. Humans aren't that special. It would be incredible to also discover a separate abiogenesis.

    • @daniell1483
      @daniell1483 Рік тому +389

      @@infinitemonkey917 I don't think you understand the terminology I used. Sapience isn't just "smart creature", it is the capacity to consider abstract concepts. So when you claim so boldly that they are sapient, you are claiming sperm whales could, say, solve mathematic equations, or consider the morality of their own existence as predatory animals. This is something which, to the best of my knowledge, is NOT something science has proven yet.

    • @dustman96
      @dustman96 Рік тому

      @@daniell1483 You have apparently spent little time in nature observing animals. Many kinds of animals are actively using their intellect to figure out the best course of action based on available information to achieve the best outcome for themselves, their family, or their species. Sometimes even for members of other species. Humans are only "special" because of their accumulation of knowledge and technology, which has built upon itself over tens of thousands of years. Just imagine yourself dropped in the middle of nowhere without any technology. That's right, you'd die, no matter what your ego tells you. When you take a step back and look at human society, it is actually quite stupid, and so are the people in it.

    • @infinitemonkey917
      @infinitemonkey917 Рік тому +88

      @@daniell1483 Sapient comes from the Latin word sapiens, meaning wise or intelligent ( Merriam ). Other sources include self aware in the definition. I have no doubt cetaceans are both intelligent and self aware.

    • @daniell1483
      @daniell1483 Рік тому +163

      @@infinitemonkey917 Okay, I won't pretend that intelligence is not part of the package that define "sapience", but you are deliberately ignoring the other half of the definition, "self awareness". And this second meaning is the one I am specifically questioning. The fact you are trying to use semantics to get away from my original post tells me you are just trying to play a word game instead of actually delivering an answer with substance.

  • @stomp21
    @stomp21 4 місяці тому +53

    Imagine you open your eyes and you realize you're a sperm whale, surrounded by your pod. You look around to see nothing else except the ocean. Your pod tells you that its time to go deep into the dark abyss to hunt. Your heart starts beating faster and faster as you dive deep and the only comfort you have is your pod of whales. Its gets darker and darker and you lose sight of them but you're still able to communicate. You gain immense respect for whales but also wish you can return to being a human, as the cold dark Abyss terrifies you. You wake up and let out a sigh of relief. Your mom comes in the room but her head is a whale, so you go back to sleep.

    • @CoNteMpTone
      @CoNteMpTone 2 місяці тому +8

      full novel trilogy about this please

    • @Reldonator
      @Reldonator Місяць тому +2

      Whale Animorph would be sick tbh

    • @mintcake2668
      @mintcake2668 Місяць тому +6

      Actually your heart should beat slower and slower as you dive, or you will be in big trouble.

    • @usergafe
      @usergafe 26 днів тому +2

      respectfully, wtf is that ending

  • @TheSixStringGuy
    @TheSixStringGuy Рік тому +9

    Just found this channel and I am blown away, I love the narrators voice and the explanation of everything, the editing and diagrams all perfect. Wish they had vids like this when I was in school.
    Liked and subscribed!

  • @Deviantial
    @Deviantial Рік тому +3530

    Can you imagine if one day we actually manage to understand their language and communicate with these magnificent creatures?

    • @eljanrimsa5843
      @eljanrimsa5843 Рік тому

      Once they understand English we will order them to attack Russian sperm whales.

    • @derusmares9508
      @derusmares9508 Рік тому +158

      Whales: "Where the 304's at?"

    • @funveeable
      @funveeable Рік тому

      No a whale does not have a language even close to our language. Our language allows us to transfer knowledge across multiple generations to increase our knowledge and allow us to build and innovate. A whale has sounds that have as many words as we have numbers. We have an infinite number of numbers and a unique set of words for each number, so the whales are probably just calling out where they are. Whales cannot innovate and do not know anything that their grandparents knew, so they have no real language.

    • @skybluskyblueify
      @skybluskyblueify Рік тому +221

      I wonder if they tell each other tales about the past when humans were killing them.Or if they talk about the past at all?

    • @pranneilthankavel6424
      @pranneilthankavel6424 Рік тому +109

      we would of course need to explain to them why we hunted them.

  • @TragoudistrosMPH
    @TragoudistrosMPH Рік тому +596

    Humans wanting to communicate with aliens always struck me as odd when we can't communicate with other Earth animals...

    • @adamwu4565
      @adamwu4565 Рік тому +50

      It's not the same individual people wanting these things though. As concurrent with those people speculating about communicating with aliens, other people have been and are still working on communicating with cetaceans and other lifeforms on Earth that we think possess a complex communication system.
      As a civilization, we can multitask.

    • @teovu5557
      @teovu5557 Рік тому +18

      Humans want to communicate with advanced alien civilizations(which must have some form of language system of some sort) while most animals on Earth besides a few have no real "complex language system".

    • @Leto_0
      @Leto_0 Рік тому +4

      "We cAn LeArN sO mUCh fRoM tHeM!"

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH Рік тому +41

      @@teovu5557 that's the trouble: "complex communication".
      Pheromones, chemicals, light, supersonic and subsonic, color. These are forms of communication we can't use, and they can potentially be complex too.
      Look up The Great Chain of Being, and you'll see why "complex" is often synonymous with "human-like".
      If they are "simple" and we are complex, why can't we understand their simpler communication if we are so complex?

    • @TragoudistrosMPH
      @TragoudistrosMPH Рік тому +11

      @@adamwu4565 :) I'm all for that multitasking.
      My worry is people confusing complex with human-like/compatible.
      Too often different is considered inferior, by the prevailing culture. If we can understand the simple, and the complex it would be something...but we don't understand "simple" communication, so perhaps communication is more instinctive than complex.
      We understand humans because we are doing a human thing. Squid communicate and understand light/color, which is complex but instinctive to them.
      (Some European thought saw language as a divine gift, like a skill, rather than something we do on instinct.
      IF I'm right, language is complex but hard to interpret for non-human minds...like try describing music or sound to a deaf person, or color to a blind human?
      How would a squid communicate a magnetic field to a human using chromatophores?)
      Sorry for the nerd philosophy :p (it's a fun topic to hypothesize over)

  • @erikhendrickson59
    @erikhendrickson59 10 місяців тому +33

    The mathematics of multi-path sonar are incredibly complex. How these animals can determine the direction of a whale cry, over bundreds of miles distance, has always been fascinating to me.
    Sonar waves can bounce not only off the ocean floor (obviously) but also the ocean surface and even get trapped in "water tunnels" created by differing water temperatures and salinity.
    The maths to calculate these things, for example on nuclear-powered subs, are some of our most highly-classified military secrets. So how do these whales do it? Are they effectively solving complex trigonometric equations in their head?

    • @user-gg8tl5yt7d
      @user-gg8tl5yt7d 3 місяці тому +4

      of course not. you don't have to mathematically calculate the acceleration and trajectory arc of a thrown ball in order to catch it.

    • @macberg5806
      @macberg5806 2 місяці тому +6

      @@user-gg8tl5yt7dthis is more like catching a ball from hundreds of kilometres away and knowing where the person who threw it was standing

    • @gamingcreatesworlddd2425
      @gamingcreatesworlddd2425 10 днів тому

      ​@@macberg5806hmm

  • @Medialover100
    @Medialover100 Рік тому +4

    This was an AMAZING show!! So informative & enjoyable. Please, please, please keep up the good work!

  • @trulyinfamous
    @trulyinfamous Рік тому +506

    The fact that this channel not only has actual captions but also cites sources is awesome. You're setting a good example.

    • @georgewilson9121
      @georgewilson9121 3 місяці тому

      the sperm whale was not fished out as they are claiming the sperm whales were difficult to get but its true fossilized petrolium did kill the whaling industry it luckily went bust before the damage would have been complete

  • @EnriqueVarelaJr
    @EnriqueVarelaJr Рік тому +1412

    I love this channel, ever since you started, the production value and research is second to none. Keep it up.

    • @johnwt7333
      @johnwt7333 Рік тому +1

      You know "second to none" means "bad; lacking; not there", right?

    • @KevinEpix
      @KevinEpix Рік тому +30

      @@johnwt7333 ?? Literally google it bro

    • @johnwt7333
      @johnwt7333 Рік тому

      @@KevinEpix as a native speaker I don't need to

    • @KevinEpix
      @KevinEpix Рік тому

      @@johnwt7333 ok moron, keep trying to correct people with false information : )

    • @johnwt7333
      @johnwt7333 Рік тому

      @@KevinEpix you're comment was deleted by UA-cam's algorithm

  • @KendrixTermina
    @KendrixTermina 9 місяців тому +11

    Being able to communicate with your baby at a long distance seems so useful! I sure wished my mom had skills like that when I was babysitting my sister xD that way she could calm her down while she's fetching groceries.

  • @maciekzajac4745
    @maciekzajac4745 Рік тому +3

    This was Real Science's best episode and one of the best videos ever uploaded to YT, hands down.

  • @layzyliam8360
    @layzyliam8360 Рік тому +271

    Been addicted to and binge watching "the insane biology of" series, amazing documentary, editing and script. Keep up the incredible work! 💯 Support from Australia.

    • @zeekthegeek4538
      @zeekthegeek4538 Рік тому +3

      Crickey mate, you're from the outback too? Love those dang rat bush fires ammirite or ammirite y'all.

    • @JB-bm1to
      @JB-bm1to Рік тому

      Same here. I originally found this channel and would put it on to go to sleep. Now I just get stoned and learn new stuff instead of sleeping.

  • @michealvargo7002
    @michealvargo7002 Рік тому +37

    Imagine hearing a sound that's below our hearing range, but loud enough to make you go deaf
    Silence:
    🐋
    Silence intensifies:

    • @WanderTheNomad
      @WanderTheNomad Рік тому +7

      Deafness would be the least of our problems. We would probably skip that step and go straight into organ failure or something and then die.

    • @TARS..
      @TARS.. Рік тому +3

      It would most probably feel like when the bass at a concert makes your stomach and heart pound but becoming stronger and painful.

  • @carrier2823
    @carrier2823 6 місяців тому +1

    saw all the sources and stuff in the description and realized you brought on a researcher to speak directly with you and suddenly realized I had to subscribe. Well done

  • @Jutte777
    @Jutte777 Рік тому +13

    I used to work on a fishing boat in an area that had sperm whales. Tourist boats that went out to see the whales
    always came over to our boat when were were dropping (or pulling up ) our nets (set at 400 fathoms).I used to wonder why they did that -
    until I heard a recording of a sperm whale search/hunting clicks. Our net roller had a lump of weld on it and it clicked every time it went around - at the same
    spacing as the whale recording. We thought it was hilarious - the tourist operators never did work it out. I think the whales had a good laugh about it as well-
    as they were pretty chill around our boat.

  • @2424Lars
    @2424Lars Рік тому +232

    I love that you did an episode on sperm whales, they're such intriguing animals! The idea that they spend most of their lives in the pitch-black deep ocean hunting illusive giant squids has always been quite haunting to me, considering they are mammals like us

    • @c.shannon3914
      @c.shannon3914 Рік тому +14

      A much of that time is spent in a huge life or death battle with the giant squids. You can see the scars, and even the tentacles ripped off the squid but still attached to the whale. It's really crazy to think about what's going on down there.

    • @vegetaking1272
      @vegetaking1272 Рік тому +3

      @@c.shannon3914 To me it’s crazy that they even hunt those huge squids. I mean why do they love to eat giant squids or much? Is it bcuz it’s the thrill of the hunt & or is it bcuz it’s just good as hell? Lol. I do eat squids, it’s not bad at all.

    • @tumppu8570
      @tumppu8570 Рік тому +2

      @@c.shannon3914 i don’t think an adult sperm whale has ever been killed by a squid though.

    • @c.shannon3914
      @c.shannon3914 Рік тому +4

      @@tumppu8570 maybe not a full grown adult and the squids can and will gang up and drown them also.

    • @c.shannon3914
      @c.shannon3914 Рік тому +5

      @@vegetaking1272 no squid or calamari taste good. They est squid because that's what they have evolved to eat. That's why they can dive like they do and have teeth like that. Most large whales are baleen whales and are filter feeders.

  • @Innomen
    @Innomen Рік тому +65

    That's amazing that they've never yelled any of us to death. Given how completely annoying and monstrous people can be. It's hard for me not to parse that as incredible mercy and tolerance, like they don't even get frustrated with us. I occasionally yell at my cat, and I deeply love the little bastard. You'd think they'd have at least done it by accident once. Truly amazing. And I also must say I'd be scared to dive with one knowing that it can just basically maim me at will from any direction.

  • @mialeroux2943
    @mialeroux2943 Рік тому +3

    Ooh love this! I would love if there's a video on elephants. I've seen many in the southern Africa area (Namibia, Botswana, South Africa) and I've seen some distinct differences in behaviors/ personalities. Botswana is just amazing with its elephant populace.

  • @GHOST8799
    @GHOST8799 Рік тому +6

    Awesome series! Just a couple questions
    Given that sound travels differently in water versus air, I wonder how comparably the decibel readings would be if they were normalized?
    Are all the vocalizations measures around the same decibel level or do they vary in range?
    Why are the vocalizations so loud? Does it allow for information/communication to be carried over a longer distance? Like if mum were communication with her calf not to follow as she dives deep.

  • @terramater
    @terramater Рік тому +575

    That are so many fascinating aspects of sperm whales! Our crew filmed a groundbreaking project that aims to use AI models to decode whale communication. As you guys mentioned, they have huge brains and complex social behaviour, but they spend most of their time in the deep sea. Could AI help us understand their complex behaviour, their complex sounds, and what they are doing in the deep sea? We're excited to see the outcome of this technology and confident that we will soon learn even more about the minds of sperm whales.

    • @realscience
      @realscience  Рік тому +96

      That's amazing! We recently spoke with some of the researchers on that project, and the possibility of getting even a glimpse of their minds is so profoundly exciting!

    • @dayaninikhaton
      @dayaninikhaton Рік тому +27

      I heard of this project, I think through John Godier, the scifi writer on his channel. Its believed if we can decode one of the cetacean languages, it could give tremendous insight into an alien first contact situation.

    • @argonaught5666
      @argonaught5666 Рік тому +16

      That is fascinating. I wonder about AI though because I think a whales 'world view' would be so different than ours that it would be totally alien to us and AI that is programmed by us. Even as interaction between different human cultures, as much as we have in common, were not understood by the various parties. Take Europeans and Native Americans for instance. The thinking and world views were so far apart that they just couldn't see each other as 'same'. So to grasp some understanding of the inner workings of the brain of another creature entirely would be exceptionally challenging. Good luck with the project though. To even get a glimpse would be fascinating!

    • @mariyam1511
      @mariyam1511 Рік тому +1

      ​@@argonaught5666 exactly ✨

    • @boohoo5419
      @boohoo5419 10 місяців тому +1

      thats so dumb.. either you have no clue about actual AI or you are just bad at your work. this didnt make any sense and is really shitty science. you dont have any samples to let the AI learn. that would mean you already understand the communication. you cant tag the samples and AI is complete useless then. but what did i expect this whole video was trash.. AI isnt some magic you can throw at stuff!

  • @pamela-623
    @pamela-623 Рік тому +68

    the adaptations animals have for extreme environments never cease to blow my mind

    • @jollyjokress3852
      @jollyjokress3852 Рік тому

      Evolution of millions of yrs. We are about to kill off so many species that have evolved over such long time periods.

    • @MizantropMan
      @MizantropMan Рік тому +9

      We only ever see the ones that managed to adapt over millions of years of random mutations.

  • @kylegamble6531
    @kylegamble6531 Рік тому +1

    Beautiful! I'm very excited for the on going research into their language patterns.

  • @GeneralLeeRetarded
    @GeneralLeeRetarded Рік тому +9

    At the 6:40 mark when it talked about whales basically only getting the benz/decompression sickness due to loud noises makes me think they are fully aware of how long they need to go down and come up but us humans being assholes accidently forced them up with sonar and noticed oh hey they can die from surfacing too quickly too...

  • @CoolPandaTheMovieNerd
    @CoolPandaTheMovieNerd Рік тому +103

    I was vacationing in Mexico a few months ago, and I got to free dive 30 feet down and get a close look to one taking a rest at the bottom surface 60 feet deep. Most amazing thing ever.

  • @chappie__
    @chappie__ Рік тому +7

    Its good to know that after some quality time with the fam, the lads always know they can go chill with each other 😂

    • @veganjotaro
      @veganjotaro Рік тому +2

      Hahaha right just like humans.

  • @Sir_raptor
    @Sir_raptor Рік тому +6

    This seemed eerily similar to those whales in the latest Avatar film. Maybe James Cameron took inspiration from these whales only. They being hunted in the film similar to real life for centuries for Oil in brain, their ability to communicate, their intelligence, but still being peaceful to humans, all these things are very close to real life. I don't think I would have been able to appreciate these creatures this much without watching the Avatar film. Thank god these whales survived centuries of hunting, otherwise we would have never known such intelligent creatures, which may be found out to be sentient existed alongside us in this planet.

  • @joncrow3228
    @joncrow3228 Рік тому +212

    You’ve got a fundamental misunderstanding of nitrogen narcosis. It’s from breathing PRESSURIZED air. If you’re not breathing pressurized air (or gas mixes), the amount of nitrogen in your body remains the same and only the nitrogen in the lungs can be absorbed. The bubbles they found in them was caused by the volume of the Navy sonar, which can boil water with their sound volume.

    • @YIO777
      @YIO777 Рік тому +25

      That's what I was thinking. I recently watched something about sonar that showed how truly loud it can be and was theorized to be responsible for the mass deaths of cetaceans that we see on shores.

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Рік тому +18

      Squishy bodied animals naturally have the air in their lungs compressed when they dive, free divers have the same problems as scuba divers at extreme depths. Plus the bubbles that could be created by sonar wouldn't persist in autopsies.

    • @YIO777
      @YIO777 Рік тому +3

      @@garethbaus5471 Interesting. I wonder, if any soft tissue damage would be apparent?

    • @garethbaus5471
      @garethbaus5471 Рік тому +6

      @@YIO777 If the sound is sufficiently loud enough you can get ruptured organs and other fairly obvious soft tissue damage especially at short range. Sonar is ridiculously loud, but at the distance it would have to be from diving cetaceans the damage would probably be limited to ruptured eardrums at the worst.

    • @downey2294
      @downey2294 Рік тому +5

      that doesn't make sense either. what good is sonar if it boils water.
      it would be like talking through your phone while there is a typhoon active.

  • @Chewbaccafruit
    @Chewbaccafruit Рік тому +84

    I love the idea of cetaceans having culture, as a thought experiment. Maybe they have their own story of Moby Dick, the white ghost who struck back at the mysterious floating fortresses that hunted them down. Their own avenging angel.

    • @louielouie684
      @louielouie684 8 місяців тому +1

      Imagine we truly start to communicate with whales via Ai and they have their moment of justice with mankind.

  • @nooberus9241
    @nooberus9241 Рік тому +10

    Using machine learning to understand whales is the most mind blowing idea I heard in a long time! I hope that is one day a reality :D

  • @jerijayz3929
    @jerijayz3929 11 місяців тому +1

    Amazing. Seems as if it was from the Curiosity Stream. I love this,. Very informative, never heard before. Approved

  •  Рік тому +21

    I love the custom music for this video! Its a great idea and the soundtrack really lights up the story with emotions. Looking forward to hear more in future videos!

  • @ShubhamSingh-mn7yj
    @ShubhamSingh-mn7yj Рік тому +53

    If you guys want to read more about whale vocalizations or how scientists are creating methods to communicate with whales - try reading "How to speak Whales". The author is the same person who appears at the end of the video, after he was almost crushed to death by a Humpback whale breach (Jumping out of water).
    That's one heck of a book to read.

  • @byronic-heroine
    @byronic-heroine Рік тому +2

    Whale: hello
    Human diver: OH GOD I'M DYING

  • @yanni-barimwald834
    @yanni-barimwald834 11 місяців тому

    fascinating. Thank you so much for this high quality content

  • @latheofheaven1017
    @latheofheaven1017 Рік тому +115

    I imagine the sperm whales who died with the bends after that US Navy exercise, were probably ascending too quickly out of fear.

    • @realscience
      @realscience  Рік тому +52

      yes that is the leading hypothesis :( so sad

    • @oldcowbb
      @oldcowbb Рік тому +36

      we are the noisy neighbor that keep blasting loud music into someone's house

    • @rubend9391
      @rubend9391 Рік тому +3

      @@oldcowbb foreign language music

    • @willfriar8054
      @willfriar8054 Рік тому +4

      There's no concentration of nitrogen in one breath. That's why freedivers can take one breath go down almost 200 ft and come back up without binds. Wheels aren't using compressed air

    • @jainin7682
      @jainin7682 9 місяців тому

      Actually probably pain. Those sonic experiments were incredibly high decibles.. I liken it to those people jumped from the burning world trade center. They knew they would die, but probably felt certain that the sound would kill them anyway (for all we know it just might have) it must have been as unbearable as the heat and smoke of a burning skyscraper.😪

  • @Gaming_Vegan_Ape
    @Gaming_Vegan_Ape Рік тому +196

    This is so awesome. One of my favorite shows is "inside nature's giants," where they dissect the animal(British tv). Joy Reidenberg is at the center of most dissecting. I highly recommend watching the sperm whale episode. Sperm whales are so majestic. Most non-human animals are someone, a sentient being trying to live their best life.

    • @razzar508
      @razzar508 Рік тому +6

      I love that series! I wish they would make more.

    • @blaco3000
      @blaco3000 Рік тому +6

      I love joy in every episode! im so happy to see her here

    • @dustintacohands1107
      @dustintacohands1107 Рік тому +2

      It’s ok to eat fish they don’t have any feelings

    • @googleuser6440
      @googleuser6440 Рік тому

      Spunk whale 🤣🤣🤣

    • @margodphd
      @margodphd 8 місяців тому

      ​@@dustintacohands1107you seem not to either, nor any brain, please volunteer for being eaten

  • @jlux4481
    @jlux4481 Рік тому +2

    The vibration part, blew my mind

  • @sakshispezia4694
    @sakshispezia4694 4 дні тому

    Depending on their hunting "grounds", sperm whales have adopted different hunting techniques: a study has confirmed that, for example, whales in the arctic sea actively chase their prey, emitting extremely fast sequences of clicks once they're close to the prey and they usually dive 400 to 600 meters. They're really fascinating creatures and I can't wait for new discoveries on their lifestyle and complex communication!

  • @HHGLowBob
    @HHGLowBob Рік тому +32

    Regarding death by sperm whale German biologist Robert Mark Lehmann told in one of his videos about a freediver who died. He said the freediver got inbetween two fighting bulls and had her organs ruptur fataly.
    I like your videos, thanks for your great Work👍

    • @amouramarie
      @amouramarie Рік тому +6

      Aw, that's awful if that's the case. :( Cetaceans understand a lot, like dolphins being fascinated with pregnant divers. I wonder if the bulls noticed/understood what happened to their visitor while they were fighting.

    • @HHGLowBob
      @HHGLowBob Рік тому +8

      @@amouramarie Probably we'll never know but it wasn't an attack but an unlucky diving accident.

  • @russellknight7729
    @russellknight7729 Рік тому +5

    As usual, your research and editing are without equal and this vid is a complete joy to watch. Well done

  • @444truthteller
    @444truthteller Рік тому +1

    The speaker did a great job attracting me to this video. Watched the whole thing with interest.

  • @KendrixTermina
    @KendrixTermina 9 місяців тому

    It never occurred to me that they have to be super loud to communicate across long distances. They even do complex modullation of their sounds as we do with our mouths.

  • @zacharywong483
    @zacharywong483 Рік тому +15

    Fantastic video, as always, Real Science team! Great job!

  • @JM-gj7de
    @JM-gj7de Рік тому +6

    Had no idea that Sperm whales slept vertically. Mind = blown

  • @Agent86th
    @Agent86th Рік тому

    I love the sound fx in this video

  • @adampetten1009
    @adampetten1009 Рік тому +118

    These whales are super smart, we've found them in deep water anout 1 km. They use to eat fish out of our nets and had teeth marks on the fish. Thier clicks mess up the depth sounders as the frequency is very close, makes them easy to find if you were looking for them. We've also seen one eat a Greenland shark.

    • @Trgn
      @Trgn Рік тому

      Being smart is a curse, probably why they commit ritual pack suicide on beaches. Being constantly tortured by oncean noise and sonar probly driven them insane.

    • @woah5016
      @woah5016 Рік тому +14

      Wow. Spotting a greenland shark is by itself a very rare sighting.

    • @ESW206
      @ESW206 Рік тому +3

      Yeah I heard they made EV vehicles

    • @1dog915
      @1dog915 Рік тому +1

      Eating a shark whole sounds..unique

  • @willemvandebeek
    @willemvandebeek Рік тому +8

    Again what an incredible video, thank you for not just showing the facts, but also showing what is still unknown yet.

  • @seanbrennan5192
    @seanbrennan5192 Рік тому +2

    Yeah this video is like Nat Geo level quality. So fascinating, well done

  • @gradysmith5576
    @gradysmith5576 Рік тому

    Awesome video!!! Thanks for posting!!!

  • @earthling_parth
    @earthling_parth Рік тому +147

    Sperm whales are truly fascinating! I learned so much from this video. Thank you to the team of Real science for researching and sharing this information ♥️

    • @HkFinn83
      @HkFinn83 Рік тому +4

      While I agree that sperm whales - and of course all animals - are fascinating, there are some very dubious claims made in this video. Be wary of taking things on the internet at face value. Especially some of these slickly produced educational videos.

    • @jinc2461
      @jinc2461 Рік тому +13

      @@HkFinn83 what are the dubious claims made in this video? I am interested to know.

    • @HkFinn83
      @HkFinn83 Рік тому +2

      @@jinc2461 first thing stated in the video. There are ‘scientists’ who believe sperm whales have ‘more complex’ language than humans? There is no serious person who believes such a thing. They have a range of vocalisations that are possibly used in communication. Totally different thing to ‘language’ in relation to linguistics. Btw this isn’t just a mistake imo, it’s calculated. These pop science media sources have a number of hot topics they know drive engagement, one of them being anything that implies animals are incredibly similar to people in a fantastical way; Koko the talking gorilla, horses that can do math etc

    • @SecureAnon10
      @SecureAnon10 Рік тому +2

      @@HkFinn83 explain

    • @tylersmith9868
      @tylersmith9868 Рік тому +2

      Wow your the first person I've ever seen spent money on a UA-cam comment

  • @bettafish3083
    @bettafish3083 Рік тому +23

    I love this channel I always am so excited when I see an insane biology. Great job keep it up

  • @olemanshavadoo7893
    @olemanshavadoo7893 Рік тому +2

    For those who don’t know how decibels work every 3 dB doubles how loud the sound is. So if human ears burst at 150 dB to get over 200 you have to double that loudness about 18 times. That is frightening.

  • @garethmurtagh2814
    @garethmurtagh2814 9 місяців тому +1

    18:00 I’d often wondered if whales recognised the threat from whaling ships and tried to avoid them. Fascinating that they may well have!

  • @joshuaespinoza8325
    @joshuaespinoza8325 Рік тому +9

    now i imagine a sci-fi subnautica type show that takes place like 100 years into the future. but instead of focusing around space travel, its people socializing with marine mammals. orcas, sperm whales, dolphins, etc.

  • @thepilotman5378
    @thepilotman5378 Рік тому +8

    I watched on nebula with the field notes, amazing. I love this kind of stuff; this in particular reminds me of the movie: Arrival

  • @BookTimeWithRyan
    @BookTimeWithRyan Рік тому +2

    I’ve read the spermaceti is likely more for communication, and less about buoyancy (heating it back up wouldn’t be efficient).
    Sperm whales are just amazing.

  • @zanderscoff
    @zanderscoff 10 місяців тому +1

    They fricken outsmarted us when we were trying to hunt them? That's mindblowing...

  • @magnuslunzer2335
    @magnuslunzer2335 Рік тому +68

    Talking with animals that are way more distantly related to us than apes would be one of the biggest goals achieved in the history of science EVER.

    • @downey2294
      @downey2294 Рік тому +2

      Why?

    • @magnuslunzer2335
      @magnuslunzer2335 Рік тому +16

      @@downey2294 Because they must have a very different way of thinking. It would also extremly help us to understand how communication in general works

    • @jw-ws8dz
      @jw-ws8dz Рік тому +6

      there might be some serious breakthroughs in linguistics

    • @gamingwhilebroken2355
      @gamingwhilebroken2355 5 місяців тому

      @@magnuslunzer2335
      FYI, we never learned to “speak” with the other great apes either. Nearly every expert, that wasn’t attached to the projects, agrees that the gorillas and chimps that “learned” sign language didn’t learn sign language. They learned to mimic signs, but that’s it. Now don’t get me wrong that’s still impressive, but it’s not language.
      Basically, the only candidates left for a species besides us having a language are a couple of cetaceans and (if I remember correctly) a species of corvids. But even those are generally considered to be, “maybe, but probably not.” The reason we are (edit: are not as quick) as quick to say they don’t have language is because they are so dissimilar to us that their language may be much harder to detect.

  • @indyreno2933
    @indyreno2933 Рік тому +10

    The sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) is the only extant member of its genus and the family Physeteridae, it is also one of the only three extant members of the superfamily Physeteroidea, the others are the pygmy sperm whale (Kogia breviceps) and the dwarf sperm whale (Kogia sima), which are both the only two extant members of their genus and a distinct family (Kogiidae).

  • @artysanmobile
    @artysanmobile 11 місяців тому

    The cover photo of this video is one of the most amazing photos I’ve ever seen. I can imagine the thrill of witnessing that firsthand.

  • @ccselmo9363
    @ccselmo9363 Рік тому +1

    Deep in the darkest depths of the ocean, where no light shines and most animals have never experienced light. *shines a giant flashlight down there*

  • @riskninja8194
    @riskninja8194 Рік тому +10

    This is by far my favorite video you all have done! I would love you all to do a cat or cat species at some point!

  • @sakabaniya9725
    @sakabaniya9725 Рік тому +4

    Your content are example of best content in youtube for free..keep it up

  • @johnjoe69
    @johnjoe69 28 днів тому +1

    The fact there's so many of them even after the big hunting means there are even more giant squids down there sustaining their population.

  • @jshumphress13
    @jshumphress13 3 місяці тому +1

    I like how the dads are like "nah family life isn't for me. I am going to go hang out with my bros. Peace out."

  • @JuanAndresLanza
    @JuanAndresLanza Рік тому +11

    Well, I watch a TON of UA-cam and hardly leave any feedback, but here it goes, I really liked this video, informative well constructed and edited, please keep them coming ! Subscribed already....

  • @ethans6539
    @ethans6539 Рік тому +4

    This channel is so great Im always amazed at the complexity and intelligence of everything in nature

  • @makaylaenjoli4350
    @makaylaenjoli4350 10 місяців тому +1

    they used to be able to hear each other much farther away but the noise of human ships and such have made it more difficult for them

  • @Sunblock5K
    @Sunblock5K Рік тому

    Wow... ultra -interesting. Thanks for this!!! 🤯 Mind blowing

  • @porudoryu
    @porudoryu Рік тому +16

    While it is exciting to think about humans becoming an interplanetary species, we still have much to learn about the mysteries of our own oceans, including the possibility of using AI to decipher the language of cetaceans, which may be the closest thing we will ever experience of encountering intelligent life. Great content guys.

  • @occasionalbuddha8649
    @occasionalbuddha8649 Рік тому +45

    Extremely well done and absolutely fascinating! Thank you! I've long been haunted by the idea of the suffering of these intelligent animals at the hands of humans for short-term, commercial gain.

  • @chrismuz
    @chrismuz Рік тому +1

    Wow, so many cool facts! - Sperm whales:
    1. have the largest brains in the animal kingdom (up to 9kg > human men 1,4kg)
    2. are highly social (the adult males less so)
    3. are louder than any other animal by far (up to 236 db; our ear drums burst at 150 db; their clicks can be heard from hundreds of miles away)
    4. live from the poles to the equator, i.e. everywhere in the sea
    5. spent 90% of their time in the (up to 3km) deep
    6. eat mainly Giant Squids for a living
    7. only have teeth on their lower jaw
    8. sleep in a vertical position.

  • @ingridllinas5612
    @ingridllinas5612 Рік тому +3

    A great video. We do have a better understanding about why these whales are able to dive so deep and how they’re internal organs function in order to dive as well to go back to the surface. It is true that quick ascending can cause a great deal of harm to these creatures as well as humans. Sonar exercises do have lots of consequences on whales death. The echolocation sounds are disturbing to human ear but it is the way they communicate. Indeed they are very social groups. When adults male leave their pod they get together with other males to explore, get mature and for breeding.

  • @drummer265
    @drummer265 Рік тому +5

    I just found this channel a few weeks ago and am so glad I did--love the content!

  • @thexxEdogxx
    @thexxEdogxx Рік тому +27

    “The male Sperm whale normally leaves his family and goes to live a more solitary life, these were thought to be the most lonely creatures alive. Recent discoveries however, prove that they are really just hanging out with other male friends!!“ sperm whales ain’t no simps, they just like hanging out with the fellas.

    • @starstorm1267
      @starstorm1267 Рік тому +6

      It’s not that they’re simps, it’s that females and their calves form matriarchal pods with strong everlasting relationships. Males will form what’s called “bachelor herds” in their youth but then start living more solitary lives in their later years once they start competing among eachother for mating rights. They will return to herds and pods occasionally however to socialize and/or breed.

    • @byronic-heroine
      @byronic-heroine Рік тому +3

      They all went out for a carton of squid ink.

    • @cacatr4495
      @cacatr4495 Рік тому +1

      @@starstorm1267
      In many ways, and in their social structure, whales are much like elephants.

  • @Melody_Raventress
    @Melody_Raventress 8 місяців тому

    Whales sleeping like that is so eerie, can you imagine swimming among them when they're like that?

  • @KappaHunter
    @KappaHunter Рік тому +1

    Wow, I love these videos! Learning the complexity of biology just goes to show how impossible the theory of evolution is. Just amazing.

  • @iez
    @iez Рік тому +8

    4:20 considering Archimedes principle, im not sure why this would make the whales sink unless the solidification also causes the whale to have a smaller volume/displace less water.

    • @danishnande9629
      @danishnande9629 Рік тому +1

      If it significantly changes the density of the tissue it should work.

    • @Leto_0
      @Leto_0 Рік тому +1

      The cavity must also fill with water, otherwise the change in density would be canceled out by an air pocket

    • @marcdheere134
      @marcdheere134 Рік тому +3

      Indeed there is something missing

    • @_Jess
      @_Jess 5 місяців тому

      ​@@Leto_0There's no air inside the skull to counteract the external pressure of the water, a reduction in the spermeceti's volume results in a void that simply collapses inwards. The soft tissues (i.e. skin and blubber) can sustain the deformation around the collapsing area if they're built for it.
      Imagine the experiment where you blow up a balloon inside another. Deflating the inside balloon (decreasing the melon's volume as it solidifies) will deflate the outer balloon as well, reducing its total volume as seen externally and of the displaced air (water).

    • @_Jess
      @_Jess 5 місяців тому

      You're imagining the skull as if it's a solid-shelled submarine, instead of an animal with pliable skin and tissue.

  • @whogoes_4113
    @whogoes_4113 Рік тому +8

    Could you please do a video on crocodiles?! They're truly amazing creatures too!

  • @crowbringer
    @crowbringer Рік тому +2

    Oh man, this is really insane! I'm waiting for the follow up video about the "rosette stone". If we could understand each other we would gain so much knowledge about the depths and this awesome specie!

    • @gamingwhilebroken2355
      @gamingwhilebroken2355 5 місяців тому

      Don’t count on that happening. Most experts think that it’s possible for certain cetaceans have a true language, buts also that it’s pretty unlikely.
      The other great apes (such as chimpanzees) do not have language (probably, it’s really difficult to prove a negative). If they had the ability to have a true language then they should be able to understand sign language. But basically every expert that wasn’t involved in the sign language projects agree that those animals didn’t learn sign language. Instead they think that they learned to mimic sign language, but could never use it in a novel or general manner.

  • @thoacao4355
    @thoacao4355 Рік тому

    love the kays cooking shoutout. she may not make the best food but she’s so pure

  • @Kevan808
    @Kevan808 Рік тому +24

    I've always wondered how they got their name, sperm whale. Thanks for the explanation 👍🏼

    • @OutrageIsNow
      @OutrageIsNow 10 місяців тому

      Humans are so mean. They cut open the first whale and were like “yo his head’s full of cum”

  • @Listeningtomuzak
    @Listeningtomuzak Рік тому +8

    Don’t you ever wonder how often aquatic mammals drown? Like a sperm whale could get in a lengthy fight with a squid when it was time to leave the sea floor and not resurface in time.

  • @chrisskinner7859
    @chrisskinner7859 Рік тому +2

    NICE JOB 👍🏽 THANK YOU!!

  • @jasonrublaitus7144
    @jasonrublaitus7144 2 місяці тому +1

    They think sperm whales make the loudest noises but they haven’t heard my girlfriend snore 😂

  • @jisharagu
    @jisharagu Рік тому +5

    1 minute ago? Man, this is mu lucky day. Time to consume one of the best content on the internet. Thaaaanks.

  • @Dell-ol6hb
    @Dell-ol6hb Рік тому +4

    Sperm whales are one of my favorite animals they are just such fascinating animals

  • @oberlurch-handimations8628
    @oberlurch-handimations8628 Рік тому +2

    It would be so amazing to understand what whales are talking. Maybe they even tell tales and myths among each other. Perhaps sometime in the future we can read whale myths about heroic whales rescuing their clan from whalers

    • @jazzling
      @jazzling Рік тому +2

      "bro no cap there's some fish just north that are tasty as fuck"

  • @easyethanol6611
    @easyethanol6611 Рік тому +1

    Just saw a doc that showed tracking of them hunting. Their clicks get really fast right before they catch their prey and then stops right after until it starts looking for something else and as it gets closer it again speeds up again to strike.

  • @ArchTeryx00
    @ArchTeryx00 Рік тому +4

    One of the examples of how sperm whale pods can closely coordinate is also fairly gross if you're not used to studying the animals. One of the key defenses a pod has against intruders is to basically all let their bowels go *at the same time,* releasing a giant cloud of... poop. And once caught up in it you aren't getting out without getting thoroughly messed up, by which time the whales have all booked it for the deep. There's footage out there of divers studying the whale pods that found out about this defensive behavior the hard way.
    So that raises the question: How do they coordinate that basic bodily function so closely? This video offers a tantalizing possibility: They *verbally* coordinate. They tell one another something's in the neighborhood that shouldn't be, ready a simple escape plan, and a click from whoever the matriarch is sets them all off at once. Great way of fending off sharks, orcas, or anything else that might be targeting their calves/smaller podmates/sick podmates/etc. And all done verbally!

  • @minoarno7415
    @minoarno7415 Рік тому +5

    the thought of there potentially being a predator that hunts these is terrifying

  • @tabalt7119
    @tabalt7119 Рік тому +4

    I think another thing that's super interesting about sperm whales is their ancestors. Currently, sperm whales are unique. There aren't other predatory whales like them. But in the past the ocean was filled with whales like sperm whales, which I think is super cool.

    • @Mare_Man
      @Mare_Man 9 місяців тому

      Dolphins, porpoises, and beaked whales are also toothed whales. Sperm whales are just the biggest ones

  • @donaldandrew7513
    @donaldandrew7513 8 місяців тому

    Imagine if whales could use their sonar abilities to scan more than what's around them, but also what's IN those things, being able to tell if a creature poses a threat or how big it's brain is. Maybe that's why there are no documented cases if humans dying due to sperm whal sounds? Wouldn't that be amazing? Never under estimate nature.

  • @Nezul
    @Nezul Рік тому +7

    You should do one on what we know of Giant Squid and their other favoured prey, Colossal Squid.