Inside the killer whale matriarchy - Darren Croft

1,636,313 views ・ 2018-12-11

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:09
Off the rugged coast of the pacific northwest,
0
9898
3330
00:13
pods of killer whales inhabit the frigid waters.
1
13228
4090
00:17
Each family is able to survive here
2
17318
2220
00:19
thanks mainly to one member,
3
19538
2040
00:21
its most knowledgeable hunter:
4
21578
2020
00:23
the grandmother.
5
23598
1610
00:25
These matriarchs can live eighty years or more,
6
25208
3210
00:28
while most males die off in their thirties.
7
28418
3090
00:31
Though killer whales inhabit every major ocean,
8
31508
3100
00:34
until recently we knew very little about them.
9
34608
3050
00:37
The details of their lives eluded scientists
10
37658
2860
00:40
until an organization called the Center for Whale Research
11
40518
3510
00:44
began studying a single population
12
44028
2580
00:46
near Washington State and British Columbia in 1976.
13
46608
4770
00:51
Thanks to their ongoing work,
14
51378
1600
00:52
we’ve learned a great deal about these whales,
15
52978
2390
00:55
known as the Southern Residents.
16
55368
2400
00:57
And the more we learn,
17
57768
1240
00:59
the more this population’s elders’ vital role comes into focus.
18
59008
5380
01:04
Each grandmother starts her life as a calf
19
64388
2684
01:07
born into her mother’s family group, or matriline.
20
67072
3810
01:10
The family does everything together,
21
70882
2060
01:12
hunting and playing, even communicating through their own unique set of calls.
22
72942
5260
01:18
Both sons and daughters spend their entire lives with their mothers’ families.
23
78202
5720
01:23
That doesn’t mean a young whale only interacts with her relatives.
24
83922
4230
01:28
Besides their own special calls,
25
88152
2230
01:30
her matriline shares a dialect with nearby families,
26
90382
3530
01:33
and they socialize regularly.
27
93912
2080
01:35
Once a female reaches age fifteen or so,
28
95992
3090
01:39
these meetings become opportunities to mate with males from other groups.
29
99082
4430
01:43
The relationships don’t go much beyond mating—
30
103512
2920
01:46
she and her calves stay with her family,
31
106432
2600
01:49
while the male returns to his own mother.
32
109032
2990
01:52
Until approximately age forty,
33
112022
2260
01:54
she gives birth every 6 years on average.
34
114282
3540
01:57
Then, she goes through menopause—
35
117822
2470
02:00
which is almost unheard of in the animal kingdom.
36
120292
3330
02:03
In fact, humans, killer whales and a few other whales
37
123622
3620
02:07
are the only species whose females continue to live for years
38
127242
3990
02:11
after they stop reproducing.
39
131232
2770
02:14
After menopause,
40
134002
1230
02:15
grandmothers take the lead hunting for salmon,
41
135232
3220
02:18
the Southern Residents’ main food source.
42
138452
2660
02:21
Most of the winter they forage offshore,
43
141112
2510
02:23
supplementing salmon with other fish.
44
143622
2470
02:26
But when the salmon head towards shore in droves to spawn,
45
146092
4220
02:30
the killer whales follow.
46
150312
2300
02:32
The matriarch shows the younger whales
47
152612
2140
02:34
where to find the most fertile fishing grounds.
48
154752
3130
02:37
She also shares up to 90% of the salmon she catches.
49
157882
4890
02:42
With each passing year,
50
162772
1470
02:44
her contributions become more vital:
51
164242
2550
02:46
overfishing and habitat destruction have decimated salmon populations,
52
166792
5080
02:51
putting the whales at near-constant risk of starvation.
53
171872
4280
02:56
These grandmothers’ expertise
54
176156
1850
02:58
can mean the difference between life and death for their families–
55
178006
3900
03:01
but why do they stop having calves?
56
181906
2290
03:04
It’s almost always advantageous for a female to continue reproducing,
57
184196
4460
03:08
even if she also cares for her existing children and grandchildren.
58
188656
4130
03:12
A couple unique circumstances change this equation for killer whales.
59
192786
4620
03:17
The fact that neither sons or daughters
60
197406
3010
03:20
leave their families of origin is extremely rare—
61
200416
3220
03:23
in almost all animal species,
62
203636
2400
03:26
one or both sexes disperse.
63
206036
2750
03:28
This means that as a female killer whale ages,
64
208786
3140
03:31
a greater percentage of her family
65
211926
1960
03:33
consists of her children and grandchildren,
66
213886
2710
03:36
while more distant relatives die off.
67
216596
2820
03:39
Because older females are more closely related to the group than younger females,
68
219416
4710
03:44
they do best to invest in the family as a whole,
69
224126
3385
03:47
whereas younger females should invest in reproducing.
70
227511
3720
03:51
In the killer whale’s environment,
71
231231
1680
03:52
every new calf is another mouth to feed
72
232911
2680
03:55
on limited, shared resources.
73
235591
2710
03:58
An older female can further her genes without burdening her family
74
238301
4280
04:02
by supporting her adult sons,
75
242581
2180
04:04
who sire calves other families will raise.
76
244761
3040
04:07
This might be why the females have evolved
77
247801
2430
04:10
to stop reproducing entirely in middle age.
78
250231
4090
04:14
Even with the grandmothers’ contributions,
79
254321
2481
04:16
the Southern Resident killer whales are critically endangered,
80
256802
3400
04:20
largely due to a decline in salmon.
81
260202
2850
04:23
We urgently need to invest in restoring salmon populations
82
263052
3510
04:26
to save them from extinction.
83
266562
1880
04:28
In the long term, we’ll need more studies like the Center for Whale Research’s.
84
268442
4300
04:32
What we’ve learned about the Southern Residents
85
272742
2240
04:34
may not hold true for other groups.
86
274982
2190
04:37
By studying other populations closely,
87
277172
2440
04:39
we might uncover more startling adaptations,
88
279612
2990
04:42
and anticipate their vulnerabilities to human interference
89
282196
3960
04:46
before their survival is at risk.
90
286156
3150
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7