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Home / World

An anaconda's play date with dolphins took a strange turn

By Carolyn Wilke
New York Times·
3 May, 2022 02:35 AM4 mins to read

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River dolphins toying with a Beni anaconda in August 2021. Photo / Omar M. Entiauspe Neto, Steffen Reichle, Alejandro dos Rios via The New York Times

River dolphins toying with a Beni anaconda in August 2021. Photo / Omar M. Entiauspe Neto, Steffen Reichle, Alejandro dos Rios via The New York Times

In August 2021, a research team was documenting biodiversity near the Tijamuchi River in Bolivia when they saw some animals that are typically difficult to observe: Bolivian river dolphins.

Just seeing them with their heads above the river was extraordinary, said Steffen Reichle, a biologist at the Noel Kempff Mercado Museum of Natural History in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia, and a member of the team. Researchers knew something was up and started snapping photos.

Only after scrolling through the images the team captured did the researchers realise the dolphins were dangling an anaconda around as they swam.

The researchers described what they saw in the journal Ecology last month. While dolphins in captivity and the wild are known for being playful, the surprising behavior of the Bolivian cetaceans seems like a new frontier in frolicking among the aquatic mammals, and some scientists still aren't sure what to think about what the team observed.

Reichle said Bolivian river dolphins usually swim below the surface, and sightings often catch only a fin or a tail. But some of the six animals they saw kept their heads above the turbid water for an unusually long time.

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At one point, two male dolphins seemingly swam in sync, a snake held by the animals' mouths. Anacondas are semiaquatic and can hold their breaths for some time. But because the snake was handled for at least seven minutes, much of this submerged, it probably perished.

Anacondas are semiaquatic and can hold their breaths for some time. Photo / Photoholgic, Unsplash
Anacondas are semiaquatic and can hold their breaths for some time. Photo / Photoholgic, Unsplash

"I don't think that the snake had a very good time," Reichle said.

Because of how long this interaction went on, the team suspects play — not predation. Bolivia's native Beni anacondas are apex predators. Other than a single case of cannibalism, researchers haven't documented the serpents being eaten. In this case, the team did not see where the snake ended up.

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With how lively dolphins are, "playing seems like a pretty good answer", said Omar Entiauspe-Neto, one of the paper's authors and a taxonomist at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul in Brazil.

Some of the dolphins gathered were juveniles, which could suggest another dimension of the interaction: the adults may have been teaching the youngsters about anacondas or showing them a hunting technique.

But Sonja Wild, a behavioural ecologist at Max Planck Institute of Animal Behaviour in Germany, who was not part of the study, was skeptical that the interaction was purposely instructive. It's more plausible the juveniles were observing because they were curious, she said.

And because anacondas are strong, Wild wondered if the snake was injured or dead before the dolphins got to it. Of all the things one could pick up, "this seems a little extraordinary", she said.

"This is the first time I've heard of dolphins playing with a large snake," added Wild, who has observed bottlenose dolphins using shells as tools.

Bottlenose dolphins have been observed using shells as tools. Photo / Peter de Graaf
Bottlenose dolphins have been observed using shells as tools. Photo / Peter de Graaf

Something else from the photos was notable — the male dolphins' erect penises.

"It could have been sexually stimulating for them," said Diana Reiss, a marine mammal scientist and cognitive psychologist at Hunter College in New York who was not involved with the study. "It could have been something to rub on."

The aroused males could have been having a sexual romp with each other before the snake became entangled.

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Researchers who study dolphins are well aware of the animals' sexual proclivities, such as rubbing their genitals on toys or inserting their penises into objects, animate and inanimate. They often use their penises for tactile interactions, Reiss said. She has even observed male bottlenose dolphins trying to penetrate the blowhole of a rescued pilot whale in an aquarium. It's possible, she added, that the males tried to insert their penises into the snake.

"There are so many questions," Entiauspe-Neto said.

A lot more is known about ocean-dwelling dolphins than riverine ones, in part because it's harder to see what's going on when river water is muddy. Even though they're limited in nature, "these observations are always valuable", Reiss said. "It's giving us another glimpse of the lives of these animals, particularly in the wild."

Whatever happened in this animal encounter, it's not the stuff of children's storybooks.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

Written by: Carolyn Wilke
Photograph by: Omar M. Entiauspe Neto, Steffen Reichle and Alejandro dos Rios
© 2022 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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