11
October 2016
A bottlenose dolphin has been pictured
flipping a porpoise into the air in a deadly attack. The
rarely seen event was witnessed by gig rowers in Newlyn Harbour in Cornwall.
Dolphin
attacks on porpoises accounted for about one death a year on average, said
Cornwall Wildlife Trust (CWT).
It is
unclear why dolphins attack porpoises but it could be an aggressive response to
feeding competition or even "misdirected sexual aggression".
Image
copyright Lizzie Warner Image
caption
The
pictures were captured by the Pendeen Pilot Gig Club in a training session.
CWT
said: "We are unsure of why this happens and it is certainly not
predation.
"Many
theories have been put forward, including misdirected infanticide (bottlenoses
will kill calves), misdirected sexual aggression or play behaviour and an
aggressive response to feed competition are just some."
Marine
Strandings Network said it found the carcass of the porpoise, which had
"multiple severe injuries as a result of the attack".
"We
do have a number of dead porpoise, and more unusually common dolphin, reported
to us with injuries resulting from bottlenose dolphin aggression."
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