BBC Wildlife - UK (2021-12)

(Maropa) #1
discoverwildlife.com BBC WILDLIFE 27

FEMALE


OF THE SPECIES


I


most marine animals. Not even

the great white’s only known
assailant, enjoy slashing them

like hors d’oeuvres.

different. Yet we have a very unusual

of only five are known to live well beyond
their reproductive capacity: four species of
toothed whale and us. Why?
Monitoring hormones in a giant
swimming torpedo with teeth isn’t easy
– which is how I came to be cruising the
Pacific Northwest in a tiny boat trying to
catch orca faeces in a net. Fishing for scat
is the least invasive (not to mention safest)
means of monitoring hormones and health
in a killer whale.
I was assisting Deborah Giles, a
researcher at the University of Washington
who studies the southern residents, a pod of
about 70 orcas that have been monitored for
almost 50 years. Originally, it was assumed
they were led by the biggest male, and the
smaller females made up his harem. We now
understand that these highly social cetaceans
live in extended family groups. Their
leaders are not only female, but are
the post-menopausal grannies.
These wise old matriarchs
are living libraries for the
environmental and cultural
knowledge that keeps their
clan alive. Orcas in captivity
have been shown to have
phenomenal photographic

memories, remembering testing patterns
after 25 years. Orca brains are the heaviest
on the planet, with a proportionally bigger
cerebrum than humans. Female orcas have a
higher brain-to-body ratio than males, giving
them even more computational power – and
helping matriarchs recall fishing spots.
When Giles and I finally located an orca
matriarch she was hunting with her son.
This close family relationship is the key to
their menopausal riddle. Orcas are unique
amongst social mammals in that neither sons
nor daughters permanently leave their birth
group. This means that orca females end up
competing across the generations for the
extra resources needed during pregnancy
and lactation.
So orca matriarchs stop breeding at
about 40 years old and invest in their
sons instead, whose offspring will
be born outside of the family group
to unrelated females and therefore
less of a drain on pod resources.
Whether this familial conflict
existed amongst early humans
remains a mystery. But orca
males are known for being
massive ‘mummies’ boys’,
kept alive by their post-
menopausal matriarch’s
hunting handouts.

Lucy Cooke is a zoologist,
broadcaster and author of
The Unexpected Truth
About Animals

Lucy Cooke on menopausal


matriarchs and mummies’ boys


NEWS ROUND UP


Big Butterfly Count
2021 results
Butterfly Conservation’s annual
survey, which ran from 16th July to
8th August, has reported the lowest
number of butterflies recorded since
it began 12 years ago. It has revealed
a continued decline of butterflies and
moths across the UK, including the
much-loved small tortoiseshell and
peacock butterflies.

Infectious disease
confirmed in
wild chimps
Leprosy has been found in wild
chimpanzees for the first time,
according to a study in the journal
Nature Reviews Microbiology. Cases
of the disease have been confirmed
in two unconnected populations in
Guinea-Bissau and the Ivory Coast.
The origins of the infections are
unclear but humans are considered
the main host for the bacteria that
causes the illness.

Bird eggshells
evolve to suit
environment
Research conducted at Royal
Holloway, University of London,
suggests the moisture resistance of
eggshells has evolved to thrive in the
habitats favoured by the birds that lay
them. However, the findings indicate
that birds in areas susceptible to rapid
climate-change effects may be more
at risk than previously thought.

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Older female orcas dote on their sons
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