Saturday, January 31, 2009

Dolphins are capable sea chefs, scientists say


CANBERRA (Reuters) – Dolphins are the chefs of the seas, having been seen going through precise and elaborate preparations to rid cuttlefish of ink and bone to produce a soft meal of calamari, Australian scientists say.

A wild female Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin was observed going through the same series of complicated steps to prepare cuttlefish prey for eating in the Spencer Gulf, in South Australia state.

"It's a sign of how well their brains are developed. It's a pretty clever way to get pure calamari without all the horrible bits," Mark Norman, the curator of mollusks at Museum Victoria and a research team member, told the Canberra Times newspaper.

The research team, writing in the science journal PLoS One, said they repeatedly observed a female dolphin herding cuttlefish out of algal weed and onto a clear, sandy patch of seafloor.

The dolphin, identified using circular body scars, then pinned the cuttlefish with its snout while standing on its head, before killing it instantly with a rapid downward thrust and "loud click" audible to divers as the hard cuttlebone broke.

The dolphin then lifted the body up and beat it with her nose to drain the toxic black ink that cuttlefish squirt into the water to defend themselves when attacked.

Next the prey was taken back to the seafloor, where the dolphin scraped it along the sand to strip out the cuttlebone, making the cuttlefish soft for eating.

Norman and study co-author Tom Tregenza, from the University of Exeter, said the behavior exhibited between 2003 and 2007 was unlikely to be a rarity.

"In addition to our observations, individual bottlenose dolphins feeding at these cuttlefish spawning grounds have been observed by divers in the area to perform the same behavioral sequence," they said in the study.

"The feeding behavior reported here is specifically adapted to a single prey type and represents impressive behavioral flexibility for a non-primate animal."

A separate 2005 study provided the first sign dolphins may be capable of group learning and using tools, with a mother seen teaching her daughters to break off sea sponges and wear them as protection while scouring the seafloor in Western Australia.

The mammals used the sponges "as a kind of glove" while searching for food, University of Zurich researcher Michael Krutzen told New Scientist magazine.

Other researchers have observed dolphins removing the spines from flathead fish prey and breaking meter-long Golden Trevally fish into smaller pieces for eating.

(Editing by Sugita Katyal)

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Cacophony

So it was the night before the night before Christmas and I was about to sit down to eat my dinner when I heard footsteps outside my door. Many of them.

I paused, wondering what was going on.

My doorbell rang.

I opened my door to be greeted by a clamorous din that vaguely resembled Christmas carols.


They may have been off key, but they sure were enthusiastic.


I was glad to see each of them.



Happy new year!

The Telephone Game


Everybody's played this game, right? It's the one where a group of people sit in a circle and one person begins by whispering something in the ear of a person next to her/him, who whispers into the ear of the next person and so on until it gets back to the person who started. The person who started then tells everyone what he was told compared to what s/he said at the beginning.

Real life telephone:

Back at Thanksgiving, my niece noticed my Ipod Touch and asked me how much I paid for it. I told them how I got it from you guys. Upon hearing this, my mom pressed me for details, so I told everyone about everything that lead up to your class giving me the iMac.


About a month later, our family got together with a bunch of friends and relatives for Christmas Eve. A few minutes after I arrived, one of my aunts approached me.

"I hear that you're the most popular teacher in Mill Valley!" she exclaimed.

"What?" I said, "that's not true. Where did you hear that?"

"I know a lot of people in Mill Valley," she said, "word gets around."

"Well," I said, "you heard wrong. There are lots of popular teachers in Mill Valley."

She patted me on the arm and left.

Later, one of my uncles saw me.

"Hey, congratulations!" he said, "I heard you won some big award for teaching!"

"Huh?" I said.

"Yeah," continued my uncle, "you got a big write up in the paper and everything!"

"That's news to me," I said.

The next time anyone asks me where I got some splashy gift, I going to say I bought it myself.....