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Dolphins found using tools
Sydney, Jan 12 (DPA) After monkeys were spotted cracking nuts with stones and birds were seen using sticks to trick termites out of their mounds, dolphins are the latest to join the ranks of tool using animals.
Janet Mann, a biologist at Georgetown University in the US, has catalogued the antics of the bottle nosed dolphin colony at Shark Bay on Australia's west coast.
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Her findings, written up on the PlosOne science website, make interesting reading, particularly because tool-using is mostly confined to females and is a skill passed down largely from mothers to daughters.
Mann found some dolphins using sponges to protect their noses as they foraged for food on the sandy bottom of the sea. They took time selecting the conical sponge that was the perfect fit for their beaks.
'Dolphins searched for up to 10 minutes for a sponge, transported sponges to foraging areas, and occasionally carried sponges in social groups for later use,' Mann said.
Dolphins using sponges were more likely to spend time foraging on their own, and to dive to deeper depths for longer, than other dolphins. Mann termed the behaviour 'sponging' and said 'how and why dolphins sponge and whether the behaviour is cultural is under debate'.
Dolphins found using tools .
Chennai Super Kings beat Nashua Dolphins .
Dolphins vigilant round-the-clock, even while asleep .
Dolphins can maintain round-the-clock auditory and visual vigilance.
Dolphins lift their fins in a similar manner to delta wing aircraft.



