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Deciphering Seals   

seal

Deadly Catch



Trained orcas in amusement parks draw millions of visitors, and movies about captive killer whales yearning for freedom make millions at the box office.

But these large, black and white sea-going mammals are not universally loved by all species. In fact, they are downright loathed and feared by their prey, namely fish and seals. While fish have pretty much accepted this sobering fact of marine life, harbor seals have learned to guard against ending life as a killer whale's main course.

Killer whales communicate in a variety of dialects. There are discernable differences, however, between the chatter of killer whales that eat only fish and those that eat both fish and seals. According to one study, harbor seals can eavesdrop on killer whales to distinguish the harmless fish-only eaters from the seal killers.

Killer Calls



In an experiment scientists recorded both fish-eating and seal-eating killer whales and then played the sounds in the vicinity of a group of harbor seals. While the fish-eating whale calls caused only 5Â percent of the seals to scatter, the seal-eating whale calls caused over 40Â percent of the seals to dive for safety.

To make sure that the seals were not simply afraid of all killer whales and had learned to ignore the fish-eating locals through observation, the researchers played tapes of seal-eating whale dialects that the test seals had never heard. Again, nearly 40Â percent of seals swam for cover.

Scientists have hailed the findings as part of the growing evidence attesting to the complexity of predator-prey relationships.

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"Ear for Killers" (Science News

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