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Researchers have published the most detailed account to date of a sperm whale birth after recording the event off Dominica on July 8, 2023.
Scientists with the Cetacean Translation Initiative (Project CETI) used drones, shipboard photography, hydrophones and machine‑learning analysis to document 11 whales — ten adult females and one adolescent male — that surrounded a labouring female known as “Rounder.” The delivery lasted about 34 minutes and, crucially, the group took turns physically lifting and supporting the negatively buoyant newborn at the surface for hours so it could breathe and recover.
The observations, reported in papers in Science and Scientific Reports on March 26, 2026, show support crossing matrilineal lines: non‑kin joined relatives in alloparental care.
Acoustic recordings revealed shifts in vocal patterns at key moments.
Authors say the behaviour — previously rarely documented in cetaceans — may have deep evolutionary roots and is vital to calf survival in the open ocean.
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Key takeaways: parallels with elephant birthing assistance and the presence of cetacean vocal dialects bolster the view that cooperative birthing and coordinated communication are common, evolutionarily rooted social strategies important for calf survival.







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