Sperm whales’ clicking dialects are evidence of ‘non-human culture’, say scientists
VANCOUVER — In the dark depths of the Pacific Ocean, there are a lot of conversations going on.
Click-click-click-click-click. That’s the sound of a sperm whale.
Click-click-click-click, pause, click. That’s a sperm whale that lives in the same area but is from a different group.
Sperm whales, the largest toothed animal in the world and easily recognized by their huge, rounded foreheads, use series of Morse-code-like clicks, known as “codas,” to communicate.