For several days now, a rare aquatic visitor has been crisscrossing an inlet near Kiel on the Baltic Sea in northern Germany. The apparently playful dolphin has been enchanting adults and children alike.
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Germany isn't exactly one of the global hot spots for sighting dolphins and certainly doesn't come to mind when you think of swimming with dolphins.
But for the past few days, a dolphin swimming in the Kieler Förde inlet has increasingly drawn crowds to the shores of the north German city.
A glimpse of Flipper
Children adventurous enough to enter the water swim alongside the animal that showed up at some point last week in the Baltic seaport.
The dolphin has become an instant tourist attraction, according to the local Kieler Nachrichten newspaper. The animal seemed to be making friends with the local children, reportedly even letting them hang on to its fins and hug it.
Passengers on the local ferry are keeping a lookout for the dolphin, which seems to enjoy swimming through the locks that connect the inlet with Kiel Canal, a 98- kilometer waterway that links the North Sea with the Baltic.
'Ever so kind and gentle'
"The traffic on the canal doesn't seem to bother it," Matthias Visser from the Water and Shipping Authority (WSA) says, adding that the dolphin swims through the locks at a frisky pace.
Swimming in the area close to the locks is forbidden, Kiel's Coast Guard said in a warning to the public. They also pointed out that the dolphin might feel crowded and asked that people show some consideration.
Dolphins don't usually trust humans much, but some do turn to human company, marine scientist Boris Culik told the Kieler Nachrichten. "Maybe he's just lonely."
Mourning rituals in the animal kingdom
Gorilla mums carrying around their dead babies, dogs that won't leave their owner's grave - it's heartbreaking to see how animals grieve when a beloved one dies. DW looks at how animals cope differently with their pain.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Gentsch
Inseparable
Gorilla mum Gana at Münster Zoo couldn't accept her baby Claudio's death. For days, she carried his dead body around and defended it against the zookeepers. This isn't unusual for great ape mothers who lose offspring, researchers say. Some moms won't even let go their baby's dead - and in the meantime, mummified - body for weeks.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/F. Gentsch
Ocean burial
Orcas, dolphins and other sea mammals also carry around their dead offspring for a while - not an easy task underwater. Researchers observed dolphin moms trying to balance their dead baby's body on their beaks, and diving after it when it finally sank to the ground. When adult dolphins die, their companions guard the dead bodies for days as well.
Image: Public Domain
Death watch
Elephants are famous for their excellent memory - no wonder they mourn especially long and intensively for their dead. A group of elephants congegrate around a dead elephants body in a kind of wake. Even elephants from other groups come to say goodbye to the deceased. Elephants have also been seen visiting the bones of other dead elephants, and touching the skeletons with their trunks.
Image: picture alliance/WILDLIFE/M. Harvey
Grooming in consolation
Baboons show strong signs of stress when a close companion dies. The concentration of stress hormones in their blood rises, researchers have shown. To cope with the loss, baboons tend to seek out their friends. They dedicate themselves to grooming, which helps to lower their stress hormones.
Image: picture alliance/chromorange
Calling to say goodbye
When a crow dies, other crows summon members of their species, and together they gather around the carcass. They'll also typically stop eating for some time after a death. The effects of grief are especially evident in birds that spend their entire life with one partner - like geese or songbirds. Effects sometimes extend to the remaining partner stopping eating, and eventually dying itself.
Fish often remain unusually still after a fellow dies in the same aquarium. Researchers say this behavior is probably due to stress hormones released into the water by the dying fish. Few studies have looked into whether fish actually mourn their dead, but this seems conceivable - at least for fish that live in pairs, like the French angelfish.
There are also cases of animals grieving for members of other species. Take, for example, "Muschi" the cat and "Mäuschen" the Asiatic black bear. The pair became inseparable at Berlin Zoo - and when the bear died, the cat refused to leave her companion's enclosure. She stayed there, meowing mournfully.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Rüsche
Guarding at the grave
People grieve deeply when they lose their beloved dog. The same goes for dogs who lose their masters. The German shepherd "Capitan" for many years stood guard at the grave of his master at the Villa Carlos cemetery in Argentina.