Cooperation by non-kin during birth underpins sperm whale social complexity

Alaa Maalouf, Joseph DelPreto, Maxime Lucas, Simone Poetto, Jacob Andreas, Antonio Torralba, Shane Gero, Giovanni Petri, Daniela Rus, David F. Gruber
Science
Vol 391, Issue 6792
March 26, 2026

We quantitatively document a sperm whale birth event, revealing collective support behaviors across kinship lines. Using high-resolution drone footage, computer vision, and multiscale network analysis, we studied the interactions within a Caribbean sperm whale unit comprising two matrilines. Our results suggest that a female family member led birth assistance and that after delivery, all individuals oriented toward and helped lift the newborn, taking turns in a coordinated, cross-kin effort. Despite historically observed foraging segregation, kinship barriers dissolved as all unit members contributed. These analyses provide evidence of birth attendance, or assistance, in a nonprimate species, a behavior long considered characteristic only of humans and their close relatives.

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