The partial merger of two dolphin societies

Author:

Danaher-Garcia Nicole123ORCID,Connor Richard4ORCID,Fay Gavin5,Melillo-Sweeting Kelly2,Dudzinski Kathleen M.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Institute of the Environment, Florida International University, 3000 NE 151st Street, North Miami, FL 33181, USA

2. Dolphin Communication Project, PO Box 7485, Port Saint Lucie, FL 34984, USA

3. University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, 285 Old Westport Road, North Dartmouth, MA, USA

4. Dolphin Alliance Project, PO Box 6449, New Bedford, MA 02742, USA

5. School for Marine Science and Technology, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, 836 S Rodney French Boulevard, New Bedford, MA 02744, USA

Abstract

Interactions between mammalian social groups are generally antagonistic as individuals in groups cooperate to defend resources from non-members. Members of the family Delphinidae inhabit a three-dimensional habitat where resource defence is usually impractical. Here, we describe a long-term partial fusion of two communities of Atlantic spotted dolphins ( Stenella frontalis ). The northern community, studied for 30 years, immigrated 160 km to the range of the southern community, observed for 20 years. Both communities featured fission–fusion grouping patterns, strongest associations between adult males, and frequent affiliative contact between individuals. For the 5-year period following the immigration, we found members of all age classes and both sexes in mixed groups, but there was a strong bias toward finding immigrant males in mixed groups. Some association levels between males, and males and females, from different communities were as high as the highest within-community associations. Affiliative contacts indicate that these individuals were forming social relationships. The mixing of two separate social groups with new bond formation is rare in terrestrial mammal groups. Such mixing between spotted dolphin groups suggests that adaptations to respond aggressively to ‘outsiders’ are diminished in this species and possibly other ecologically similar dolphins.

Funder

Dolphin Communication Project

Al Sweeting Jr.

University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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