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  • Thanks to the Monterey Bay Aquarium for partnering with us

  • on this episode of SciShow! It otter be a fun one.

  • [♪ INTRO]

  • Animals snuggling up with baby animals that are not related to them is internet gold.

  • But memes aside, cute critters taking care of young

  • that aren't their own, or alloparenting, is a real thing

  • that has been documented in more than two hundred seventy species.

  • Take Rosa, for example. That isn't her pup she's snuggling.

  • You see, she's one of the residents at the Monterey Bay Aquarium

  • who helps foster orphaned otters.

  • And as a surrogate otter mom, she not only ensures

  • that orphaned pups get lots of love, she also teaches them

  • how to be an otter, so they can eventually be released

  • back into the wild.

  • Like, Selka here is teaching a youngster how to break open

  • crab shells to get at the tasty meat inside.

  • OooLooks like they're a quick study!

  • Which is great, because catching and cracking open crabs

  • is an essential otter skill.

  • And this mama is teaching a little one how to dive

  • and find food buried in the sand!

  • The fact that these otters are so willing to lend a paw

  • and step in as parents might seem surprising, though.

  • Surprising from an evolutionary perspective, that is.

  • After all, adoptive parents are essentially helping

  • someone else's offspring that carry someone else's genes.

  • And usually, that care is at the adoptive parents' own expense.

  • They have to use up some of their valuable energy and resources.

  • Like, a mama sea otter eats more than a third of her body weight

  • every day in order to have the energy to take care of her pup.

  • And if she doesn't have enough resources to take care of herself

  • and her offspring, she'll usually abandon her young

  • within the first few weeks after birth.

  • Taking care of a young animal could have other costs, too,

  • like delaying an animal's ability to have young of their own.

  • Sowhy would they do it? Well, it turns out, there are a lot of possibilities.

  • For starters, for Rosa and Selka and the other animals

  • at the Aquarium, resources aren't an issue.

  • The Aquarium's humans make sure everyone has plenty of food.

  • And the otter moms don't need to worry about sharks or orcas

  • or male sea otters, either.

  • Making sure the animals in their care are healthy and well fed

  • is a big part of how rehabilitation programs encourage

  • potential foster parents to follow their natural inclinations

  • to take care of young animals.

  • And sometimes, that 'natural inclination' may be much stronger,

  • more like a biological urge to parent.

  • The Aquarium team has observed wild otters adopting lost

  • or orphaned pups.

  • And, there have been cases of female polar bears adopting new litters.

  • In both cases, biologists think that could be

  • because they were physiologicallyprimedfor motherhood.

  • These cases all involve female animals that had recently

  • lost their own young.

  • And if that happened while the females were lactating,

  • they may have still had all these hormones swishing around

  • in their bodies telling them to take care of babies.

  • Plus, since polar bears raise their cubs in dens away

  • from other bears, they might not have evolved good

  • kid-recognizing mechanisms.

  • In fact, that's probably another big reason alloparenting happens

  • the animals simply don't realize they aren't taking care

  • of their own kids.

  • This might explain why birds like cowbirds and cuckoos

  • can lay their eggs in other birds' nests

  • and successfully pass along their parenting duties to entirely different species!

  • The parent birds don't want to mistakenly reject one of their own,

  • so they're better off just taking care of everyone in their nest.

  • And in some species, breeding sites are so crowded that it can be

  • hard to tell whose kids are whose, so parents just take care

  • of whichever ones are nearby.

  • There might be some other benefits to doing that, too.

  • It could be that the young are at least sort of related to them

  • they're their sister's or their cousin's offspring.

  • In that case, they share some of the same genes.

  • Plus, there's the possibility of a littleyou watch my kid,

  • I'll watch yours.”

  • That seems to be what happens in many species of whales and dolphins.

  • Young ones can't always keep up with their fast-swimming,

  • deep-diving parents.

  • And frankly, like most parents, sometimes, cetacean mamas

  • just want a break to do something not kid-related.

  • So, it's common for other adults in a social group

  • to take over parenting duties from time to time.

  • Sometimes, these alloparents even let the babies drink their milk!

  • And that might be because they're related to the actual parents,

  • as social groups tend to contain relatives.

  • But even if they're not, they might reasonably expect

  • that someone else will take care of their kids when they need

  • someone to lend a handor, in the event of their untimely demise.

  • Plus, these temporary caretakers might be learning a thing

  • or two about how to take care of their own offspring.

  • That seems to be another major reason animals adopt.

  • Studies suggest that such parenting practice is especially useful

  • if animals only produce a few litters in their lifetime

  • or if caring for their kids requires a lot of work.

  • On top of all of that, there's evidence that foster parents

  • get benefits which help them with non-parenting tasks.

  • Like, they might actually become smarter.

  • A 2015 paper published in the journal Animal Behaviour

  • found that female African striped mice who had raised pups

  • were better able to remember their way through a maze, for example.

  • And it didn't matter if the mice had raised their own

  • or another mouse's pups.

  • That may be because the act of parenting alters mammalian brains,

  • whether or not the parent actually gave birth to the offspring

  • they're taking care of.

  • If all that weren't enough reason for an animal to alloparent,

  • having a kid around can sometimes give individuals a status boost.

  • For example, male baboons can temporarily boost their social status

  • and gain protection from other aggressive males

  • if they're seen grooming and taking care of young.

  • And barbary macaques will go even further by placing an infant

  • down between themselves and a dominant male to get social status

  • without needing to fight for it.

  • Some scientists think this trick works because high ranking primates

  • parent more offspring.

  • The idea is these lower-ranking animals are taking advantage

  • of the fact that the more dominant ones don't want to attack

  • what are likely their own kids.

  • Finally, taking care of someone else's baby might increase

  • an animal's chance of having their own someday.

  • For example, it's thought that the act of adoption

  • may make female northern elephant seals more likely

  • to have offspring the next year.

  • That's because studies suggest lactation and regular nursing

  • help induce ovulationwhich, you know, is kind of important

  • in mammalian reproduction.

  • It's really hard to know if a wild seal has ovulated, of course.

  • But females in this species generally avoid and rebuff males

  • if they're not physiologically ready to get pregnant.

  • And a 1972 study did note that females who nursed a pup to weaning

  • usually copulated before heading off from the breeding site,

  • while ones that didn't weren't seen mating.

  • In the end, depending on the species, alloparenting may have

  • a whole suite of advantagesand not just for the kid.

  • So it's not actually that surprising so many animals step up

  • and take care of other animals' young.

  • And it's certainly a help for when our species wants to do some rehabilitation of animals,

  • because these furry or feathered foster parents are a real help

  • Right now, there are lots of species of endangered animals being saved

  • thanks to the hard work of humans and animal foster parents alike.

  • The Monterey Bay Aquarium's Sea Otter Program, for example,

  • which works with the threatened California sea otter,

  • has been in place since 1984, and has helped more than 700 otters!

  • And let's give a special thanks to Selka and Rosa for showing off

  • their fostering skills. They're doing the Sea Otter Program proud!

  • Through similar efforts, the Monterey Bay Aquarium and its colleagues

  • in the Association of Zoos and Aquariums give lots of orphaned animals

  • another shot at life, while helping their species return

  • to their historic range.

  • The Aquarium also participates in programs helping the critically

  • endangered African penguin and the endangered

  • Western snowy plover, for example.

  • And these programs are just one of the many ways the Aquarium

  • is fulfilling its mission to care for the ocean and everything

  • that lives in it.

  • If you want to learn more, you can head over to montereybayaquarium.org.

  • And if you want to see more sweet otter cuddles, be sure to check out

  • the Aquarium's Instagram, Twitter, and other social media accounts!

  • You'll find links in the description.

  • [♪ OUTRO]

Thanks to the Monterey Bay Aquarium for partnering with us

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