Tuesday, April 16, 2024

SCIENCE: Sperm whales drop giant poop bombs to save themselves

Recent science findings show how effective poop is to keep predators away, and for that matter, anyone!  Here's a study about whales who use "poop bombs" to save themselves from attacks. I know there's a bathroom joke in there somewhere, but I'll just focus on the science!

(Photo; In a rarely witnessed event, sperm whales drove away a pod of orcas by releasing huge plumes of poo. (Image credit: Martin Procházka via Alamy Stock Photo)

Sperm whales drop giant poop bombs to save themselves from orca attack

  LIVE SCIENCE, March 22, 2024 By Jennifer Nalewicki

Sperm whales blasted a "big dark bubble" of poop to prevent an impending orca attack off the southern coast of Western Australia.

Scientists witnessed the clever defense strategy unfold Tuesday (March 19) during a tourist excursion in Bremer Canyon, a whale-watching hotspot off the coast between Albany and Hopetoun. They described seeing a "cloud of diarrhea" permeate the water, and this rarely seen defense mechanism seemed to help the sperm whale pod escape what could have been a fatal attack by at least 30 killer whales, ABC News Australia reported.

"It's called defense defecation," Jennah Tucker, a marine biologist with Oceans Blueprint, a marine and environmental sciences research organization, who was on the charter boat, told ABC. When the animals defecate, she said, they pass their huge tails through their poop to drive away or confuse attackers.

As the event unfolded, onlookers noticed a large, "dark bubble" pop up to the water's surface. At first, they thought it was blood from one of the sperm whales, potentially a small calf. But when the team later reviewed footage of the plume, they realized it was actually whale poop.

"Because [a] sperm whale's diet consists mostly of squid, they actually have this really reddish colored poo," she said.

In this demonstration of defense defecation, the pod formed a circle with their heads together, and the whales fanned their tails in unison — forcing their excrement toward the unsuspecting orcas. "This is called a rosette, another defensive mechanism they use when they're under attack," Tucker said.

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