December
18, 2018, University of St Andrews
Dolphins
are picky about who they are friends with and shun rival groups, new research
has found.
However,
an international team of researchers, led by the University of St Andrews,
found that the groups still managed to cooperate by sharing the sea – taking
turns to inhabit particular areas.
The
study, published in Marine Biology, investigated the social network
of dolphins in the
northern Adriatic Sea. It showed that dolphins living in the Gulf of Trieste
form distinct social groups, and some don't like each other.
It is
widely known that dolphins usually live in groups, and in the case of the
common bottlenose dolphin the composition of these groups changes often, with
members often joining or leaving.
However,
these groups are not random. Rather, it is individual dolphins preferring to
spend time with other individuals who could be described as their "best
friends".
The
researchers, from the Morigenos Slovenian Marine Mammals Society and the Sea
Mammal Research Unit (SMRU) at the University of St Andrews, studied the
dolphins in the region for more than 16 years.
They
found that the dolphin society in the Gulf of Trieste comprised three distinct
groups: two large social groups with stable membership and long-lasting
friendships, and a smaller third social group, nicknamed
"freelancers", with much weaker bonds and no long-lasting
friendships.
However,
although the two large groups tended
to avoid each other, they did manage to share particular areas of the sea, with
each group using them at different times of the day. Such temporal partitioning
based on time of day has not previously been documented in whales and dolphins,
nor in other mammals.
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