Posted: 2018-02-01 04:19:22

Updated February 01, 2018 17:14:42

A "talking" killer whale in France that says "hello" and "bye bye" is thought to be the first to be taught to mimic the human voice.

Key points:

  • Researchers found Wikie the killer whale was capable of imitating her trainers in France
  • She could successfully imitate words like "hello", "bye bye" and "one, two"
  • Wikie was able to make the noises with her head above the water and through her blowhole

Wikie, a 14-year-old female orca that lives in Marineland in Antibes in south-eastern France, was recorded on video imitating numerous human sayings including the name "Amy", and even blowing raspberries out of its blowhole.

Scientists already knew killer whales could imitate bottlenose dolphins and sea lions, but the research found Wikie was capable of copying the sounds of one of its human trainers.

Researchers at St Andrew's University in Scotland found Wikie made "recognisable copies" of all the six phrases they said to it, and picked them up "relatively quickly", according to a paper published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Learning very quickly

The researchers attempted to get Wikie to mimic the words "ah ah", "hello", "bye bye", "Amy", "one, two" and "one, two, three".

The killer whale was tested 30 times for each of them and got "hello" and "one, two, three" on its first time.

It managed to copy "hello" correctly 55 per cent of the time during the trial, and "one, two" 36 per cent of the time.

Wikie made the noise with its head out of the water and with its blowhole exposed, which researches said was significant as it normally communicates underwater.

Although the subject did not make perfect copies of all of the sounds, "they were recognisable copies as assessed by both external independent blind observers and the acoustic analysis".

"This accuracy level is particularly remarkable given that the subject possessed a very different sound production system compared to humans," the paper said.

Specific voice of whales

Observations of killer whales in the wild have shown different pods to have different "dialects", specific to each group.

The researchers said this recent trial reinforced the orca's ability to learn through "vocal imitation" and can be maintained through social interaction.

They said it is possible their data represented a "conservative estimate" of the ability of killer whales' ability to imitate.

"Our data show that killer whales can copy sounds outside their usual repertoire — which is an important piece of information if one wants to know not only what a species does, but also what it can do, under a variable set of circumstances," the paper said.

Topics: animals-and-nature, animal-science, research, science-and-technology, zoology, human-interest, france

First posted February 01, 2018 15:19:22

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