Giving Compass' Take:

· Jessica Pierce discusses the recent story about a mother orca carrying her dead calf for 17 days and what it tells us about how animals experience death and grief.

· What do scientists know about death-related behaviors in animals? Do animals experience grief?

· Learn about the grieving orca and what she tells us about wildlife conservation


For many weeks, news of a mother orca carrying her dead infant through the icy waters of the Salish Sea captured the attention of many around the world. Keeping the infant afloat as best she could, the orca, named Tahlequah, also known as J35 by scientists, persisted for 17 days, before finally dropping the dead calf.

This has been one of the most protracted displays of marine mammal grieving.

Among scientists, however, there remains a prejudice against the idea that animals feel “real” grief or respond in complex ways to death. Following reports of the “grieving,” zoologist Jules Howard, for example, wrote, “If you believe J35 was displaying evidence of mourning or grief, you are making a case that rests on faith, not on scientific endeavor.”

As a bioethicist, I’ve been studying the interplay between science and ethics for more than two decades. A growing body of scientific evidence supports the idea that nonhuman animals are aware of death, can experience grief and will sometimes mourn for or ritualize their dead.

Read the full article about how animals experience death by Jessica Pierce at The Conversation.