|  20-08-2008, 04:24 AM | #77 | 
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				 تاريخ التسجيل: Jun 2008 نوع الدراسة: إنتظام الجنس: أنثى 
					المشاركات: 989
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				 رد: أصدقــاء للأبـد Friend 4 Ever 
 
Alfat,
 welcome brother
 
 Here is a good article about Dolphins
 
 
 Wild dolphins tail-walk on water
 
 
 By Richard Black                                                                                                                          Environment correspondent, BBC News site
 
  
 
   
 The tail-walking dolphins were spotted at the coast near Adelaide
 
 A wild dolphin is apparently teaching other members of her group to walk on their tails, a behaviour usually seen only after training in captivity.
 The tail-walking group lives along the south Australian coast near Adelaide.
 One of them spent a short time after illness in a dolphinarium 20 years ago and may have picked up the trick there.
 Scientists studying the group say tail-walk tuition has not been seen before, and suggest the habit may emerge as a form of "culture" among this group.
 "We can't for the life of us work out why they do it," said Mike Bossley from the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS), one of the scientists who have been monitoring the group on the Port River estuary.
 "We're doing systematic observations now to determine if there's something that may trigger it, but so far we haven't found anything," he told BBC News.
 Rich culture
 In the 1980s, Billie, one of the females in the group, spent a few weeks in a local dolphinarium recovering from malnutrition and sickness, a consequence of having been trapped in a marina lock.
 
    It would seem that among the Port River dolphins we may have an incipient tail-walking culture  
 
 Mike Bossley
 
 She received no training there, but may have seen others tail-walking.
 Now, other females in the group have picked up the habit. It is seen rarely in the wild, and the obvious inference is that they have learned it from Billie.
 "This indicates that they do learn from each other, which is not a surprise really, but it does also seem that they exhibit elements of what in humans we would call 'cultural' behaviour," said Dr Bossley.
 "These are things that groups develop and are passed between individuals and that come to define those groups, such as language or dancing; and it would seem that among the Port River dolphins we may have an incipient tail-walking culture."
 The "cultural" transmission of ideas and skills has been ed in apes, while dolphins off the coast of Western Australia are known to teach their young to use sponges as an aid when gathering food.
 Richard.Black-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk
 
 
 
 Jasmine
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 اللهم إنـك عفوٌ تحب العفو فاعـفُ عنّـا
 
 
  
 
 Life becomes precious and more special to us when we look for the little everyday miracles and get
 excited about the privileges of simply being human
 
 Told By :
 Tim Hansel
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