Cool jazz: Bowhead whales improvise when singing, study says
WASHINGTON — Some whales are taking jazz riffs to new depths.
For the first time, scientists have eavesdropped year-round on the songs of bowhead whales, the little-heard whales that roam the Arctic under the ice. They found that bowheads — the bigger, more blubbery cousins of the better known humpbacks — are more prolific and downright jazzier than other whales.
“Bowhead whales are the jazz singers of the Arctic. You don’t know what they’re going to do. They inject novelty,” said University of Washington oceanographer Kate Stafford.
Over three years a single underwater microphone captured 184 distinct bowhead whale songs, according to Stafford’s study in Wednesday’s Biology Letters . That’s remarkable because there are probably only a couple hundred males in an area between Greenland and Norway to make the songs, Stafford said.