Dolphins, whales not just fish in sea

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st playing with dolphin

AP

Intelligent: Argentinian soccer player Lionel Messi swims with a dolphin at the Delphinus aquarium, on the outskirts of Playa del Carmen, Mexico. Picture: Delphinus Riviera Maya / AP

FIONA MACRAE

London

Dolphins are so intelligent that they should be thought of as “non-human persons” and given their own bill of rights, it is claimed.

A coalition of scientists, philosophers and animal welfare groups have come up with a declaration of dolphin rights that they hope will one day be enshrined in law.

This would stop them being kept in zoos and waterparks, and being attacked by fishermen.

Whales would also be elevated above other animals by the list of rules, leading to whalers being classed as murderers, the American Association for the Advancement of Science’s annual conference heard in the Canadian city of Vancouver.

Whale-watching trips would be subject to regulations that would respect the creatures’ privacy and developers and oil companies would have to give huge consideration to the effect their projects would have on the animals’ life and culture.

Philosopher Thomas White said: “Scientific evidence is now strong enough to support the claim that dolphins are, like humans, self-aware, intelligent beings with emotions and personalities. Accordingly, dolphins should be regarded as ‘non-human persons’ and valued as individuals. From an ethical perspective, the injury, deaths and captivity of dolphins are wrong.”

Those who drew up the bill of rights are known as the Helsinki Group and include UK members of the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society.

They say thanks to advances in science, it is now clear that dolphins are extremely intelligent, complex and sensitive mammals.

The bill of rights states that every individual member of the cetacean order – whales, dolphins and porpoises – has a right to life. It also says that no one has the right to own the creatures or to do anything that undermines their rights, freedoms or norms. Its authors are using the Vancouver conference to try to get more scientists and people on their side. They believe this is a step towards eventually persuading governments to enshrine the principles in law.

When brain weight is compared with body weight, the dolphin has the second-largest brain on the planet after humans.

The conference heard that dolphins are self-aware – they can recognise themselves in the mirror.

There are also examples of them grieving for lost calves, feeding ailing pod mates and co-operating with fishermen when there is a meal in it for them.

In Laguna, Brazil, when a shoal of fish enters the lagoon, the dolphins herd it towards the fishermen. Any fish that escape their nets provide an easy meal.

At Dingle, south-west Ireland, a bottlenose nicknamed Fungie regularly entertains sightseers in boats. Perhaps the most striking example of dolphin intelligence involves Kelly, a member of a pod at the Institute for Marine Mammal Studies in Mississippi that were rewarded with fish for clearing up litter from their pool.

Each piece of litter equated to one fish. To raise her intake of fish, Kelly tore the litter into pieces and presented them one by one. One day, she caught a gull and was given a large haul of fish for her efforts.

She then started to use the fish she won for litter picking to lure gulls into her jaws. She also taught the tactic to her calf, which passed it on to other youngsters in the pod.

Given the opportunity, dolphins will watch television and follow instructions delivered on the screen. Chimps do this only after months of training.

Dolphins can be taught to understand human words, sentences and demands.

Like humans, dolphins are altruistic and there are examples of them going to the aid of swimmers and surfers attacked by sharks.

They use body language. The “side-flop”, jumping clear of the water and landing on their side, is thought to mean: “I want to go now.”

They have regional accents, with the whistles made by those off Wales different to those living off the Irish coast.

They have a form of adult-onset diabetes but are able to turn it on and off. Learning how they do this could lead to new treatments for the human form of the condition.

Males woo females by presenting them with gifts from bouquets of weed to sticks and lumps of marine debris. – Daily Mail

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Anonymous, wrote

IOL Comments
04:53pm on 22 February 2012
IOL Comments

Of course, they are not "just' fish - morons! they are mammalsand highly intelligent as read in thearticle, as well many reference books. It is jst human arrogance and greed, who don't respect nature, as it truly is! Arrogance! Arrogance! Arrogance! Leave them alone! Ignorant MORONS!!!

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Nikki Botha, wrote

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04:35pm on 22 February 2012
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I returned from Taiji in Japan in December where I documented and fought against the mass dolphin slaughter which is directly related to the captive industry. Seeing dolphins chased in to a cove, being slaughtered in front of each other while the “lukcy” ones are ripped from freedom to be subjected to a life of misery for the sake of entertainment is both gut wrenching and traumatic. Taiji is the biggest source for the captive dolphin industry. My friend was arrested when he tried to take photos of a terrified wild caught dolphin being transported in a sling in to captivity. DO NOT SUPPORT THE CAPTIVE DOLPHIN INDUSTRY.

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Nikki Botha, wrote

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04:27pm on 22 February 2012
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I returned from Taiji in Japan in December where I documented and fought against the mass dolphin slaughter which is directly related to the captive industry. Seeing dolphins chased in to a cove, being slaughtered in front of each other while the "lukcy" ones are ripped from freedom to be subjected to a life of misery for the sake of entertainment is both gut wrenching and traumatic. Taiji is the biggest source for the captive dolphin industry. My friend was arrested when he tried to take photos of a terrified wild caught dolphin being transported in a sling in to captivity. DO NOT SUPPORT THE CAPTIVE DOLPHIN INDUSTRY. For more information, go to http:www.thecovemovie.com or http:www.seashepherd.org

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