The Sperm Whale's Deadly Call
Scientists have discovered that the massive mammal uses elaborate buzzes, clicks and squeaks that spell doom for the animal's prey
- By Eric Wagner
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
The mobile band of life was named the deep scattering layer, or DSL, for the way that it scattered sound waves. In the Sea of Cortez, the fish that inhabit it, called myctophids or lanternfish, are among the jumbo squid’s preferred prey. The squid follow the fish’s daily vertical migration, spending the daylight hours between 600 and 1,200 feet and then pursuing them toward the surface at night.
Biologists assumed that the DSL creatures were at the mercy of currents, drifting haplessly, helplessly along. But Benoit-Bird and colleagues have found that even microscopic plants and animals can lead active and finicky lives. Phytoplankton, seeking out particular conditions of biochemistry and light, will form sheets that can stretch for miles but are only a few feet high. Slightly larger zooplankton take advantage of this great conveyor of food. Lanternfish likewise fight against prevailing currents to reach the feast. Things gather to eat or not be eaten—by fish, by squid, by sperm whales. What was thought to be at the whim of physics turns out to act on its own biological imperatives.
“I always go in with the same question,” says Benoit-Bird, who in 2010 was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship for her work on sensing biological activity in the deep ocean. “How come things are found where they are? And so what? I think of it as the Big Why and the So What. All the pieces make the full picture.” More than trying to see like a sperm whale, she is trying to see—to understand—everything. “Sometimes, you get a little swept away,” she says. “It’s fun just to watch and go, ‘Cool!’ ”
Using her gadgets, she can record a whole world at once. She shows me a printout from an earlier Sea of Cortez cruise with Gilly, when sperm whales surrounded them. “We knew they were down there beneath us,” she says, “but you can’t tell what they’re doing from the boat.”
The acoustic reading shows a ten-minute window, with time on the horizontal axis and depth on the vertical. One thick band stretches from 700 feet or so to more than 900 feet. This is the deep scattering layer, the zooplankton and lanternfish. Individual squid, one visible as a blue-green smear, the other in orange, are among them, perhaps feeding. A school of squid shows up a few minutes later, loitering about 60 feet from the surface. The real drama, though, starts at one minute and 55 seconds, with a pair of red and orange squiggles: two sperm whales, one near the surface and the other more than 300 feet under the boat. The latter dives to a school of squid nearly 400 feet deep. The tracks of the squid and the whale converge, are lost as they move into the band of fish, and pop out of the jumble.
Seeing this, I think back to a night near the cruise’s end, when I was alone on the bow of the BIP XII. The trawler was chugging over a still sea, and the night was hypnotically quiet. Then, somewhere in the distance, I heard the spouting of whales. But I could see nothing, and the boat continued on in languorous pursuit of the moon’s reflection.
For a long time, we didn’t know much more than that about the whales. But now we have a better idea of what is happening in that strange world where the sperm whale swims. We can imagine the wan glow from a school of lanternfish, the jumbo squid among them, and a sperm whale moving through the gloom with relentless purpose. The whale searches with usual clicks and gives a quick creeeeeek! as it locks onto the squid. There is a rush of pressure from its head wave as it surges to its prey, jaw agape, and the jet from the squid as, panicked, it bursts away into the darkness.
Eric Wagner, who wrote for Smithsonian about cranes in Korea’s Demilitarized Zone, frequently reports for Smithsonian.com.
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Related topics: Whales Behavior Conservation Biology
Additional Sources
“Individually distinctive acoustic features in sperm whale codas,” Ricardo Antunes et al., Animal Behaviour, April 2011
“Controlled and in situ target strengths of the jumbo squid Dosidicus gigas and identification of potential acoustic scattering sources,” Kelly J. Benoit-Bird et al., Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, March 2008









Comments (5)
Definitly marvelous ... i really like this article because i learned about the misterious world of the sperm whale , morover their influence in the world industry.
There are more to learn about this wonderfull creature that's why i want to tell to the researches they are doing a good job and they should continue doing that. i really apreciatte their commitment.
Greeting from peru - an english student finishing his Writting homework
p.d = smith sonian, please make articles about japanese culture. i would be happy .
Posted by kevin on December 11,2011 | 06:41 PM
I really love this article, but why this codas clicks haven't had so much importance? I would like an article abour that
Posted by Carolina on December 11,2011 | 02:15 PM
For a marvelous novel regarding whales, try 'Sounding' by Hank Searls. If I could only take three books with me to a deserted island, that would be one of them.
Posted by Dr. Mercury on November 20,2011 | 07:04 AM
Wow, this article was a fascinating read.
I admire Kelly Benoit-Bird's ability to use technology to capture the sound and movement of the sperm whale, squids, and other sea life. I also admire her ability to analyze the data and to keep asking herself questions. Eric Wagner did an excellent job of writing the story in a style that was easy to follow and understand, and at the same time, convey the beauty.
Posted by Kathy on November 19,2011 | 01:10 PM
Great interesting articles.
Posted by Gil Higa on November 17,2011 | 10:44 PM