Dolphins Rescuing Humans
Dolphin
Rescuing Humans
Dolphins
are social animals, living in groups called pods and taking
loving care of their babies. They’re also known to be very
friendly to humans; only two cetacean attacks of people are
recorded, one a killer whale mistaking a surfboard for a seal
and the other a cranky dolphin who had just given birth and
been separated from her baby by her trainer. (In the first
case, the whale did a double-take and swam off, and in the
second, the dolphin just nipped the trainer.) With these sorts
of dispositions, it’s not really odd that dolphins should be
credited with rescuing people. But do they really?
Dolphin
Heroes
In Greek stories and old sea
stories, there are dozens of claims of dolphins helping
drowning sailors, rescuing people from sharks, and making
themselves useful as guides through treacherous waters. The
“treacherous waters” guiding can be ascribed to the dolphin’s
needing a similar water depth as many boats.
Dolphins and other cetaceans
also help injured members of their family groups and newborn
babies to the surface by swimming under them and nudging
upward, just as some reports describe them doing with humans.
Interestingly, there are some real reports of dolphins helping
other cetaceans. In 1983 at Tokerau Beach, North-land, New
Zealand, a pod of pilot whales ran aground during ebb-tide. The
Zealanders who lived there came out and did their best to keep
the whales alive, sponging their skin and calming them, until
the tide came back in. But even then the whales were having
trouble orienting.
Dolphins came to the rescue.
Somehow, a pod of dolphins who were nearby figured out what was
happening. They swam into the shallows, putting themselves at
risk, and “herded” the pilot whales out to sea, saving 76 of 80
whales. Five years earlier, a similar incident had occurred at
Whangarei harbor. If dolphins are smart enough and helpful
enough to save other cetaceans in that manner, why not
humans.
Real-Life Cases:
Dolphins Saving Humans
You’ve seen it in Flipper and
other popular culture stories; dolphins rescuing humans from
drowning or sharks, keeping them safe from harm. But does it
really happen?
The answer is, surprisingly
often.
Several years ago, in the Gulf
of Akaba, a British tourist was rescued by three dolphins from
sharks. Near the Sinai Peninsula, a ship captain had stopped
his boat so several passengers could watch dolphins playing.
Three of the passengers decided to swim with them, and one
stayed a little longer than the others. To his horror, he was
bitten by a shark – and more were coming. Suddenly, three
dolphins placed themselves between the tourist and the sharks,
smacking the water with tails and flippers, and drove the
sharks off so the man could be rescued.
In 2004, a group of swimmers
were confronted by a ten-foot great white shark off the
northern coast of new Zealand. A pod of dolphins “herded” them
together, circling them until the great white fled. There are
several other examples from the area of Australia of similar
incidences.
In another case in the Red
Sea, twelve divers who were lost for thirteen and a half hours
were surrounded by dolphins for the entire time, repelling the
many sharks that live in the area. When a rescue boat showed
up, it appeared that the dolphin pod were showing them where
the divers were; they leaped up in the air in front of the
rescuers, jumping toward the lost people as if to lead the boat
onward – as, according to old stories, they often did with
endangered ships in treacherous water.
Because we can’t talk to
dolphins, we can’t really fathom what their motives are in
these situations. It is, however, very possible that they are
indeed trying to help and protect fellow mammals in the ocean
to safety. If this is true, it means that they are the only
animals, besides humans, which show true altruism.
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