Mom, is that you? Seals show family recall.It's hard enough for human parents to recognize the baby-faced, 18-year-old dropped off at the dorm in August as the square-jawed young man retrieved in December. How do creatures with less cortex cope? Quite well, thank you, says Stephen Insley of the National Zoological Park in Washington, D.C.--at least if the parent is Callorhinus ursinus Callorhinus ursinus northern fur seal. , the northern fur seal The Northern Fur Seal, Callorhinus ursinus, is an eared seal found along the north Pacific Ocean, the Bering Sea and the Sea of Okhotsk. It is the largest member of the fur seal subfamily (Arctocephalinae) and the only species in the genus Callorhinus . Fur seal fur seal, fin-footed marine mammal of the eared seal family (Otaridae), highly valued for its fur. Like the closely related sea lion, the nine species of fur seals are distinguished from the true seal by external ears and the ability to turn their hind flippers mothers are unique among mammals, Insley says, for leaving nursing pups for up to 2 weeks while foraging. When they return, they somehow find their young among the crowd. At 4 months of age, the pups strike out on their own, migrating south for the winter. Parents and offspring tend to meet again at the Alaska site the next year. For all the time apart, mothers and offspring in a cove on St. Paul St. Paul as a missionary he fearlessly confronts the “perils of waters, of robbers, in the city, in the wilderness.” [N.T.: II Cor. 11:26] See : Bravery Island, Alaska, didn't forget each other's voices, Insley reports in the July 27 NATURE. When he played tapes of 26 animals recorded either 2 to 3 days or 3 to 4 weeks earlier, each seal moved toward or attended to the speaker broadcasting the voice of its mother or pup. The length of the interval made no difference. Tapes of familiar but unrelated seals didn't elicit such behavior. Insley tested six mothers and offspring that returned the next year. They exhibited similar recognition of the year-old calls. When he tested a few females returning after 4 years, they still attended to speakers playing 4-year-old calls of their mothers. The study "helps to fill the gap in our knowledge about long-term social relationships," says Jill Mateo, a Cornell University Cornell University, mainly at Ithaca, N.Y.; with land-grant, state, and private support; coeducational; chartered 1865, opened 1868. It was named for Ezra Cornell, who donated $500,000 and a tract of land. With the help of state senator Andrew D. psychologist. Long-lasting cooperative associations of mammals and prolonged monogamy monogamy: see marriage. in birds hint at long-term social memory in those species, she says, but field studies are difficult. "Insley's paper is important in providing experimental support for ... anecdotal observations," agrees Marc D. Hauser, a Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. psychologist. He says similar results might turn up in primates, elephants, and social carnivores such as wolves. Sociality can actually interfere with measuring social memory, Insley says. "Just because an animal has a stable group for long periods of time doesn't mean they'd remember each other if removed," he argues. Animals may recall environmental features rather than individuals. Ted Miller, a biologist at Memorial University of Newfoundland Memorial University of Newfoundland, at St. John's, N.L., Canada; provincially supported; coeducational; founded 1925 as Memorial Univ. College. It achieved university status in 1949. in St. John's, says the adaptive significance of recall between 4-year-olds and mothers is unknown. If the phenomenon isn't merely a byproduct by·prod·uct or by-prod·uct n. 1. Something produced in the making of something else. 2. A secondary result; a side effect. Noun 1. of the seals' intelligence and long life, he says, it will require a new understanding of the females' interactions. Though Hauser and Miller praise Insley's study, they both say that researchers need to find how much the seals' calls change over time. If calls retain identifying features, the feats of recognition are less remarkable than if physical changes in offspring radically alter their calls, say the researchers. A baby-faced juvenile who stays a baby-faced juvenile even after dorm life is, after all, pretty easy to pick out. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion