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Stereotypical resting behavior of the sperm whale

Abstract

Summary. Though very little is known about sleep in wild cetaceans, toothed cetaceans in captivity sleep with one side of their brain at a time [1]. Such uni-hemispheric sleep is thought to enable swimming, voluntary breathing, predator avoidance and/or social contact during sleep at sea [2,3]. Using suction cup tags, we discovered that sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) worldwide conduct passive shallow 'drift-dives' in stereotypical vertical postures just below the sea surface. Bouts of drift-dives accounted for 7.1% of recording time, or 36.7% of non-foraging time. Drift-dives were weakly diurnal, occurring least from 06:00-12:00 (3% of records), and most from 18:00-24:00 (30% of records). A group of vertically drifting whales were atypically non-responsive to a closely-passing vessel until it inadvertently touched them, suggesting that sperm whales might sleep during these stereotypical resting dives.


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