A television captured in the coastal H2O of Cape Town , South Africa , shows a rare interaction between a seal and its prey . While the burst of ink clouds bet like the seal of approval is grappling with an enormous calamari , the explosive escapee is in fact a dwarf sperm giant ( Kogia sima ) , which are capable of releasing a " bullet bomb " of grim liquid when under flak .

Dwarf spermatozoon giant fill temperate and tropical maritime habitat and are particularly fond to a continental shelf or slope where the seafloor is closer to the aerofoil . They ’re a little mixed bag of heavyweight at a maximal length of around 2.7 meters ( 8 foot 10 inches ) and are gray in color with a chunky soundbox and forgetful , squat headspring . As well as employing the defense force strategies of a calamari , gnome sperm whale eat calamary , hunting them in small pods of up to four whales .

As a modest - sized cetacean mammal , they ’re preyed upon by their larger cousins , the orcas , as well as cracking white sharks and even tumid seals , as take care in the video . When under attack dwarf spermatozoan whales have adapted a novel defense proficiency , as they eject a cloud of reddish - brown fluid into the water , obscure themselves from purview and confusing their attacker much like squid .

In the television , a dwarf spermatozoon hulk can be seen fleeing as a predatory seal zooms after it in pursuit . The following is dead immersed in a crimson - brownish swarm as the whale inks in an attempt to confuse the seal . This dark fluid is ejected from the whale ’s intestine , and they can release more than 11 cubic decimeter ( 3 gallons ) of it when under attack .

The television is rare   because dwarf sperm giant are subtle . Though they drop most of their time in the shallows , they ’re shy and head clear-cut of boat and natator . When they show up , little of them is seeable above the water and they sink vertically rather than diving with their tails in the airwave , making it heavy to recognize one fall in the surface .

" This ' ink ' behavior has been documented before , " said cetacean acoustician Karlina Merkens toScienceAlert , " but it has been observe very rarely , and probably never seen and record in shallow weewee like this before . "

A report fromSA Peopleindicated the Salmon P. Chase ended severely for the whale , who probably get hold itself so close to shore due to illness . Unable to effectively use echo sounding in a noisy haven location , the maroon and wound animal was later on recover by official , but due to its significant injury the decision was made for the whale to be killed .