logo
Why are orcas gifting food to humans across the oceans?

Why are orcas gifting food to humans across the oceans?

First Post10-07-2025
Over two decades, orcas have been observed offering prey to humans in 34 recorded encounters across the globe. From stingrays to sea turtles, killer whales appear to gift food, then wait and watch. Scientists now believe this rare and deliberate behaviour reveals complex social intent, curiosity and possibly interspecies connection read more
Orcas come up for air in the Norwegian Sea, Norway, January 3, 2024. File Image/Reuters
A newly published study has shed light on an unusual and rarely seen behaviour in killer whales (Orcinus orca): voluntarily presenting dead prey to humans.
Over a span of 20 years, researchers documented 34 such interactions, offering the first scientific insight into a phenomenon that has perplexed and intrigued marine biologists.
These incidents, observed off the coasts of California, New Zealand, Norway, Canada and Patagonia, involved orcas approaching humans either in the water, on boats, or near the shore, and intentionally delivering items such as fish, birds, rays or marine mammals.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The study was published in the Journal of Comparative Psychology and authored by scientists from Canada, New Zealand and Mexico, including Jared Towers, executive director of the Canadian research organisation Bay Cetology, who also witnessed several of these encounters firsthand.
How a unique behavioural pattern emerged across oceans
The research team compiled records of orcas approaching humans without prompting, either by swimmers, boaters or shore observers.
In total, 11 instances involved individuals in the water, 21 were from boats and two occurred onshore. Remarkably, in all but one event, the whales lingered near the humans after dropping the prey, apparently observing what would happen next.
The food offerings included 18 different species, among them stingrays, seals, birds, otters, jellyfish, starfish, grey whale blubber and even sea turtles and seaweed.
Some encounters were captured on video; others were described in interviews with eyewitnesses and scientists.
In seven cases, when the initial offering was declined or ignored, the orcas attempted the gesture again, sometimes multiple times. In three recorded incidents, when humans returned the prey to the whale, the whale again delivered it back.
Among the more striking cases was a young male orca in New Zealand named Funky Monkey, who repeatedly approached a researcher with a stingray balanced on his head.
In Norway, a whale appeared to offer jellyfish to a diver. Jared Towers himself was approached in 2015, while documenting a pod feeding on seabirds in Alert Bay, Canada.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Two orcas — Akela and her younger brother Quiver — each brought him a dead bird, dropped it nearby, and stayed close before retrieving their prey and swimming away.
Another such encounter occurred in 2018, when a young female delivered a harbour seal pup.
Behind the orcas' behaviour
The orcas involved were all generalist predators, typically hunting a wide variety of surface-dwelling marine animals.
Researchers noted that no such behaviour was observed in deep-feeding orca groups that exclusively eat fish, even though those populations are also accustomed to human presence. This distinction may be key to understanding the emergence of this practice.
A killer whale member of the Bigg's orca T65B pod is seen in the Salish Sea near Eastsound, Washington, US, July 7, 2023. File Image/Reuters
According to the research, generalist orca pods often work together to take down large prey, sometimes leaving them with more food than they can consume.
In such scenarios, there's an opportunity to either discard, play with, or repurpose the excess prey.
'Orcas often share food with each other — it's a prosocial activity and a way that they build relationships with each other,' said Towers. 'That they also share with humans may show their interest in relating to us as well.'
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
The study highlights that food-sharing among orcas is common within pods and may function as a social bonding mechanism. Extending this behaviour towards humans could reflect an adaptation or extension of those social instincts.
Notably, the research also suggests these food offers might allow the whales to engage in exploratory behaviour, or 'practise learned cultural behaviour' in new, interspecies contexts.
What orca history tells us
Killer whales are known for their sophisticated social behaviours, language dialects and cultural traditions.
In the wild, they have been observed gently interacting with one another through gestures like nibbling each other's tongues or synchronised swimming, suggesting high levels of social cohesion and communication.
This is not the first time that orcas have worked in concert with humans. Historical records show that orca pods once cooperated with Indigenous Australian and European whalers, helping them corral baleen whales in exchange for access to their meat and tongues.
However, that was a mutualistic relationship with clear benefit for the orcas. The events described in this new study are different — the orcas are giving away food without any visible incentive or gain.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Towers and his colleagues suggest that such interactions may indicate generalised altruism — actions that benefit another being without direct benefit to oneself.
The presence of such behaviours could also hint at theory of mind — the ability to attribute mental states, like intentions or desires, to others.
'They're actively learning about us by testing the waters,' Towers explained. 'Curiosity is one of the things that reduces uncertainty.'
Are orcas forming bonds with humans?
In many of the encounters, the animals seemed interested in observing human reactions and often re-engaged when ignored, suggesting a deeper purpose. However, scientists also caution that manipulation cannot be ruled out, though it's unclear what goal that manipulation would serve.
'This behaviour may represent some of the first accounts of a wild predator intentionally using prey, and other items, to directly explore human behaviour,' the study authors noted.
The researchers believe the act of gifting may provide short- or long-term emotional or intellectual benefits to the animals, adding, 'none of which are mutually exclusive.'
The study concludes that given orcas' high intelligence, strong social ties, and cooperative nature, it is plausible that these food-sharing behaviours could be tied to cognitive experimentation, curiosity or even an attempt to understand humans better.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Also Watch:
With inputs from agencies
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump's Golden Dome Defense System Looks For Alternative To Musk's SpaceX
Trump's Golden Dome Defense System Looks For Alternative To Musk's SpaceX

NDTV

time8 hours ago

  • NDTV

Trump's Golden Dome Defense System Looks For Alternative To Musk's SpaceX

Washington: The Trump administration is expanding its search for partners to build the Golden Dome missile defense system, courting Project Kuiper and big defense contractors as tensions with Elon Musk threaten SpaceX's dominance in the program, according to three sources familiar with the matter. The shift marks a strategic pivot away from reliance on Musk's SpaceX, whose Starlink and Starshield satellite networks have become central to US military communications. It comes amid a deteriorating relationship between Trump and Musk, which culminated in a public falling-out on June 5. Even before the spat, officials at the Pentagon and White House had begun exploring alternatives to SpaceX, wary of over-reliance on a single partner for huge portions of the ambitious, $175 billion space-based defense shield, two of the sources said. Musk and SpaceX did not respond to requests for comment. After Reuters reported initially that SpaceX was a frontrunner to build parts of Golden Dome, Musk said on X that the company had "not tried to bid for any contract in this regard. Our strong preference would be to stay focused on taking humanity to Mars." Due to its size, track record of launching more than 9,000 of its own Starlink satellites, and experience in government procurement, SpaceX still has the inside track to assist with major portions of the Golden Dome, especially launch contracts, sources say. Project Kuiper, which has launched just 78 of a planned constellation of 3,000 low-earth orbit satellites, has been approached by the Pentagon to join the effort, signaling the administration's openness to integrating commercial tech firms into national defense infrastructure and going beyond traditional defense players. Jeff Bezos, Amazon's executive chairman, told Reuters in January that Kuiper would be "primarily commercial," but acknowledged "there will be defense uses for these [low-earth orbit] constellations, no doubt." A spokesperson for Project Kuiper declined to comment for this story. The Pentagon declined to comment. The White House did not respond to requests for comment. Golden Dome's ambitions mirror those of Israel's Iron Dome - a homeland missile defense shield - but a larger, more complex layered defense system requires a vast network of orbiting satellites covering more territory. In the search for more vendors for the satellite layers of Golden Dome, "Kuiper is a big one," a US official said. While SpaceX remains a frontrunner due to its unmatched launch capabilities, its share of the program could shrink, two of the people said. Officials have reached out to new entrants like rocket companies Stoke Space and Rocket Lab are gaining traction and will be able to bid on individual launches as the program matures, according to the US official. Later in the development of Golden Dome "each individual launch is going to get bid, and we have to actually give bids to other people," besides SpaceX, the official said. Need For Satellites There is an urgent need for more satellite production. Last year Congress gave Space Force a $13 billion mandate - up from $900 million - to buy satellite-based communication services in what was widely seen as one of many efforts to stimulate private sector satellite production. Amazon's Project Kuiper, a $10 billion initiative led by former Starlink managers dismissed by Musk for slow progress, Reuters has reported, has lagged behind SpaceX in deployment. But its potential defense applications - such as communications that could aid missile tracking - have drawn renewed interest as the administration prepares to allocate the first $25 billion tranche of funding authorized under Trump's sweeping tax and spending bill. Traditional defense giants Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin, and L3Harris are also in talks to support Golden Dome. L3Harris CFO Kenneth Bedingfield told Reuters in an interview the company has seen a surge in interest in its missile warning and tracking technologies, which are expected to play a key role in the system. Northrop, meanwhile, is pursuing several efforts including a space-based interceptor, a component that would enable missile strikes from orbit, Robert Flemming, the head of the company's space business, told Reuters in an interview. "Lockheed Martin is ready to support Golden Dome for America as a proven mission partner," Robert Lightfoot, president of Lockheed Martin Space, said in a statement. Golden Dome's initial outreach this spring invited smaller, newer Silicon Valley firms seen as nimbler, more sophisticated and potentially less expensive alternatives to the big defense firms to the table - but that was before the Musk-Trump feud upended that calculus. Several with close ties to Trump aside from SpaceX, including Palantir and Anduril - were considered early frontrunners to win big pieces of the $175 billion project. But the Musk-Trump feud has reshaped the competitive landscape. Musk recently launched the "America Party," a tech-centric, centrist political movement aimed at defeating Republicans who backed Trump's tax-and-spend agenda. Rapid Timeframe Trump launched the Golden Dome initiative just a week into his second term, pushing for rapid deployment. Space Force General Michael Guetlein, confirmed by the Senate on July 17, is set to lead the program with sweeping authority. Under a previously unreported directive from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Guetlein has 30 days from confirmation to build a team, 60 days to deliver an initial system design, and 120 days to present a full implementation plan, including satellite and ground station details, two people briefed on the memo said. The inclusion of commercial platforms like Kuiper raises security concerns. Its satellites would need to be hardened against cyberattacks and electronic warfare, a challenge that has plagued even SpaceX's Starlink network. In May 2024, Elon Musk said SpaceX was spending "significant resources combating Russian jamming efforts. This is a tough problem." Beyond the technical and political challenges, Golden Dome could reshape global security dynamics. A fully operational space-based missile shield may prompt adversaries to develop new offensive capabilities or accelerate the militarization of space.

White House to launch plan to boost US AI globally, limit foreign curbs
White House to launch plan to boost US AI globally, limit foreign curbs

Business Standard

time9 hours ago

  • Business Standard

White House to launch plan to boost US AI globally, limit foreign curbs

The plan will 'focus on empowering American workers through AI-enabled job creation and industry breakthroughs' Reuters WASHINGTON The White House intends to publish a plan on Wednesday that calls for the export of American AI technology abroad and a crackdown on state laws deemed too restrictive to let it flourish, a document seen by Reuters shows. According to a summary of the draft plan seen by Reuters, the White House will bar federal AI funding from going to states with tough AI rules and ask the Federal Communications Commission to assess whether state laws conflict with its mandate. It will also promote open source and open weight AI development and "export American AI technologies through full-stack deployment packages" and data center initiatives led by the Commerce Department. The plan will "focus on empowering American workers through AI-enabled job creation and industry breakthroughs," according to the document. Janet Egan, a fellow at The Center for a New American Security, said the plan, as described by Reuters, represents a market shift in strategy from "a primarily restrictive approach to AI" under Biden to a focus on answering the question "how do you start spreading the infrastructure and the technology that will underpin the globe?" Despite the focus on expansion, the plan does mention the importance of "defending against misuse and preparing for future AI-related risks," according to the summary. US President Donald Trump ordered his administration in January to produce a plan that would make "America the world capital in artificial intelligence" and reduce regulatory barriers to its rapid expansion. That report, which includes input from the National Security Council, is due by Wednesday. Trump is set to mark that deadline with a major speech as part of an event titled Winning the AI Race, organized by White House AI and crypto czar David Sacks and his co-hosts on the All-In podcast. "The Plan will deliver a strong, specific, and actionable federal policy roadmap that goes beyond the details reported here and we look forward to releasing it soon, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy spokeswoman Victoria LaCivita said in a statement. Trump is laser-focused on removing barriers to AI expansion, a marked departure from his predecessor, Joe Biden, who feared US adversaries like China could harness AI to supercharge its military and harm allies. Biden, who left office in January, imposed a raft of restrictions on exports of coveted American AI chips to China and other countries that could use or divert the semiconductors to China over national security concerns. Trump rescinded Biden's executive order aimed at promoting competition, protecting consumers and ensuring AI was not used for misinformation. He also pulled back Biden's so-called AI diffusion rule, which capped the amount of American AI computing capacity that some countries were allowed to obtain via US AI chip imports. Last month, Sacks downplayed the risk that coveted American AI chips could be smuggled to bad actors and expressed concern that regulating US AI too tightly could stifle growth and cede the critical market to China. Under Trump's plan, the White House would also promote AI use at the Pentagon, launch a program to identify federal regulations that impede AI development and streamline the permitting process for data center construction.

Donald Trump's Golden Dome looks for alternatives to Musk's SpaceX
Donald Trump's Golden Dome looks for alternatives to Musk's SpaceX

Business Standard

time9 hours ago

  • Business Standard

Donald Trump's Golden Dome looks for alternatives to Musk's SpaceX

The Trump administration is expanding its search for partners to build the Golden Dome missile defense system, courting Project Kuiper and big defense contractors as tensions with Elon Musk threaten SpaceX's dominance in the program, according to three sources familiar with the matter. The shift marks a strategic pivot away from reliance on Musk's SpaceX, whose Starlink and Starshield satellite networks have become central to U.S. military communications. It comes amid a deteriorating relationship between Trump and Musk, which culminated in a public falling-out on June 5. Even before the spat, officials at the Pentagon and White House had begun exploring alternatives to SpaceX, wary of over-reliance on a single partner for huge portions of the ambitious, $175 billion space-based defense shield, two of the sources said. Musk and SpaceX did not respond to requests for comment. After Reuters reported initially that SpaceX was a frontrunner to build parts of Golden Dome, Musk said on X that the company had "not tried to bid for any contract in this regard. Our strong preference would be to stay focused on taking humanity to Mars." Due to its size, track record of launching more than 9,000 of its own Starlink satellites, and experience in government procurement, SpaceX still has the inside track to assist with major portions of the Golden Dome, especially launch contracts, sources say. Project Kuiper, which has launched just 78 of a planned constellation of 3,000 low-earth orbit satellites, has been approached by the Pentagon to join the effort, signaling the administration's openness to integrating commercial tech firms into national defense infrastructure and going beyond traditional defense players. Jeff Bezos, Amazon's executive chairman, told Reuters in January that Kuiper would be "primarily commercial," but acknowledged "there will be defense uses for these [low-earth orbit] constellations, no doubt." A spokesperson for Project Kuiper declined to comment for this story. The Pentagon declined to comment. The White House did not respond to requests for comment. Golden Dome's ambitions mirror those of Israel's Iron Dome - a homeland missile defense shield - but a larger, more complex layered defense system requires a vast network of orbiting satellites covering more territory. In the search for more vendors for the satellite layers of Golden Dome, "Kuiper is a big one," a U.S. official said. While SpaceX remains a frontrunner due to its unmatched launch capabilities, its share of the program could shrink, two of the people said. Officials have reached out to new entrants like rocket companies Stoke Space and Rocket Lab are gaining traction and will be able to bid on individual launches as the program matures, according to the U.S. official. Later in the development of Golden Dome "each individual launch is going to get bid, and we have to actually give bids to other people," besides SpaceX, the official said. NEED FOR SATELLITES There is an urgent need for more satellite production. Last year Congress gave Space Force a $13 billion mandate - up from $900 million - to buy satellite-based communication services in what was widely seen as one of many efforts to stimulate private sector satellite production. Amazon's Project Kuiper, a $10 billion initiative led by former Starlink managers dismissed by Musk for slow progress, Reuters has reported, has lagged behind SpaceX in deployment. But its potential defense applications - such as communications that could aid missile tracking - have drawn renewed interest as the administration prepares to allocate the first $25 billion tranche of funding authorized under Trump's sweeping tax and spending bill. Traditional defense giants Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin, and L3Harris are also in talks to support Golden Dome. L3Harris CFO Kenneth Bedingfield told Reuters in an interview the company has seen a surge in interest in its missile warning and tracking technologies, which are expected to play a key role in the system. Northrop, meanwhile, is pursuing several efforts including a space-based interceptor, a component that would enable missile strikes from orbit, Robert Fleming, the head of the company's space business, told Reuters in an interview. "Lockheed Martin is ready to support Golden Dome for America as a proven mission partner," Robert Lightfoot, president of Lockheed Martin Space, said in a statement. Golden Dome's initial outreach this spring invited smaller, newer Silicon Valley firms seen as nimbler, more sophisticated and potentially less expensive alternatives to the big defense firms to the table - but that was before the Musk-Trump feud upended that calculus. Several with close ties to Trump aside from SpaceX, including Palantir and Anduril - were considered early frontrunners to win big pieces of the $175 billion project. But the Musk-Trump feud has reshaped the competitive landscape. Musk recently launched the "America Party," a tech-centric, centrist political movement aimed at defeating Republicans who backed Trump's tax-and-spend agenda. RAPID TIMEFRAME Trump launched the Golden Dome initiative just a week into his second term, pushing for rapid deployment. Space Force General Michael Guetlein, confirmed by the Senate on July 17, is set to lead the program with sweeping authority. Under a previously unreported directive from Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Guetlein has 30 days from confirmation to build a team, 60 days to deliver an initial system design, and 120 days to present a full implementation plan, including satellite and ground station details, two people briefed on the memo said. The inclusion of commercial platforms like Kuiper raises security concerns. Its satellites would need to be hardened against cyberattacks and electronic warfare, a challenge that has plagued even SpaceX's Starlink network. In May 2024, Elon Musk said SpaceX was spending "significant resources combating Russian jamming efforts. This is a tough problem." Beyond the technical and political challenges, Golden Dome could reshape global security dynamics. A fully operational space-based missile shield may prompt adversaries to develop new offensive capabilities or accelerate the militarization of space. Still, established defense players like Lockheed and RTX, formerly Raytheon, will likely be at the front of the line for contracts. Executives at RTX, maker of the Patriot missile defense system, said on Tuesday they believe the system is going to be integral to Golden Dome "especially if you want to make a significant impact over the next 2 to 3 years."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store