Dolphins recognize their fellow dolphins by tasting their urine, according to a study published Wednesday. “Dolphins keep their mouths open and sample the urine of familiar individuals longer than that of unfamiliar individuals,” researcher Jason Bruck of Stephen F. Austin State University in Texas told AFP.
“This is important because dolphins are the first vertebrates to demonstrate social recognition through taste alone,” added the lead author of the study, published in the journal Science Advances.
According to the study, using the sense of taste as a detection method could be very advantageous in the open ocean, since urine plumes persist for a while after an animal swims away.
It was previously known that the bottlenose dolphins studied specifically address their conspecifics with whistling noises. However, it is also common for the animals to touch the genitals of their fellow animals with their mouths, which at least offers the opportunity to taste their urine.
Dolphins do not have olfactory bulbs, so unlike other animal species, they cannot identify their fellow species by smell.
To test their theory, the researchers first trained eight bottlenose dolphins to provide urine samples in exchange for food. The researchers then presented the animals with urine samples from known and unknown conspecifics.
They found that the animals spent about three times as much time with the urine of familiar animals as they did with the urine of unfamiliar bottlenose dolphins.
In another experiment, the researchers played dolphin whistles in addition to the urine samples. The dolphins stayed near the speaker longer when the sounds came from the same animal as the urine sample.
The researchers interpret this behavior when the signals match as a sign that the bottlenose dolphins have recognized familiar animals.
The researchers suspect that water-insoluble fat-like substances called lipids form unique chemical signatures that the dolphins recognize. It is “probable that dolphins can also extract other information from the urine, such as reproductive status,” the researchers write in the study.
They could also possibly use messenger substances in the urine to influence the behavior of their conspecifics.
The researchers warn that man-made pollution, such as oil spills or other chemical runoff, could affect the dolphins’ ability to taste each other. However, this needs to be further investigated.
Humans also have the gene that enables dolphins to recognize the lipids. It helps people recognize when they’ve eaten enough.