Anonymous ID: ce45ff Feb. 3, 2020, 7 p.m. No.8017065   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7232

https://www.msn.com/en-ie/news/offbeat/wild-grey-seal-caught-e2-80-98clapping-e2-80-99-on-camera-for-the-first-time/ar-BBZA2Ah#image=1

 

 

Wild grey seal caught ‘clapping’ on camera for the first time

 

By Nilima Marshall, PA Science Reporter 2 days ago

 

 

 

 

 

 

A wild grey seal has been caught “clapping” on camera for the first time, making sounds that resemble “shotgun-like cracks”.

 

The large male was filmed striking its flippers together off the coast of the Farne Islands, during the breeding season in 2017.

While captive seals can be seen clapping in zoos and aquariums, scientists say this is the first time one of their wild counterparts has been caught on camera performing the action.

 

© Provided by PA Media Scientists believe male wild grey seals clap to demonstrate their strength (Ben Burville/Newcastle University)

While humans clap to applaud or express approval, in the case of wild grey seals (Halichoerus grypus), this gesture signifies quite the opposite.

Scientists believe male seals clap to demonstrate their strength, as part of an attempt to ward off competitors and attract potential mates.

 

© Provided by PA Media Male seals clap to demonstrate their strength (Ben Burville/Newcastle University)

The action produces a “loud high-frequency noise”, sending out “a clear signal” to other males in the area.

In the video, the male seal can be seen swimming close to a female, with other males lurking nearby, before it starts clapping.

Dr Ben Burville, a researcher at the University of Newcastle, who took the footage, said: “The effect of the clap was instant and the rival males rapidly dispersed.

 

1/50 SLIDES © Vicki Jauron, Babylon and Beyond Photography/Getty Images

Dance buddies

 

“The clap was incredibly loud and at first I found it hard to believe what I had seen.”

 

Dr Burville, who had been trying for many years to capture clapping seals on camera, added: “I’ve heard the distinctive shotgun-like cracks many times over the years and I felt sure this clapping behaviour was the source, but filming the seals in action has eluded me for 17 years.

 

© Provided by PA Media Newcastle University researcher Ben Burville has been trying to film wild grey seals clapping for the last 17 years (Ben Burville/Newcastle University)

“Then one day I had heard a couple of claps in the distance, I just hit the record button and eureka! I got it!”

The video is part of an international study published in the journal Marine Mammal Science.

Dr David Hocking, from Monash University in Australia, who led the study, said: “The discovery of ‘clapping seals’ might not seem that surprising, after all, they’re famous for clapping in zoos and aquaria.

“But where zoo animals are often trained to clap for our entertainment – these grey seals are doing it in the wild of their own accord.”

 

The researchers say understanding more about grey seals and other marine life could help protect the species against the harmful effects of pollution.

Dr Hocking added: “Clapping appears to be an important social behaviour for grey seals, so anything that disturbed it could impact breeding success and survival for this species.

“Human noise pollution is known to interfere with other forms of marine mammal communication, including whale song.

“But if we do not know a behaviour exists, we cannot easily act to protect it.”

 

most articles i checked left out the part that says this was recorded in 2017

Anonymous ID: ce45ff Feb. 3, 2020, 7:22 p.m. No.8017306   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7364

they scared i searched seal caught on twat and had hundreds of hits and capped a few then couldnt post qr kept refresh by self.

now isearched again in twat and got 2hit and 2 spelled seals from years ago

having trouble now with script stopping

now i just typed seal caught on camera

and nothing

some kind of code because this was filmed in 2017 and they are acting like its new

was all over twatter

for me now all gone

little bit freaked out