Researchers
used an interdisciplinary approach combining ecology and archaeological methods
to study sea otters' past behavior
Date: March 14, 2019
Source: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human
History
An
international team of researchers has analyzed the use by sea otters of large,
shoreline rocks as "anvils" to break open shells, as well as the
resulting shell middens. The researchers used ecological and archaeological
approaches to identify patterns that are characteristic of sea otter use of
such locations. By looking at evidence of past anvil stone use, scientists
could better understand sea otter habitat use.
Sea
otters are an especially captivating marine mammal, well known for their use of
rocks to break open shells. Sea otters are estimated to have once numbered
between 150,000-300,000 individuals and their range stretched from Baja
California, Mexico, around the northern Pacific Rim to Japan. Their numbers
were dramatically reduced by the fur trade. In California, the southern sea
otter population was reduced to around 50 individuals, but a massive
conservation effort has resulted in increasing their numbers to around 3000
today. However, the southern sea otter is still considered threatened.
Sea otters
are unique for being the only marine mammal to use stone tools. They often use
rocks to crack open shells while floating on their back, and also sometimes use
stationary rocks along the shoreline as "anvils" to crack open
mollusks, particularly mussels. A joint project including the Max Planck
Institute for the Science of Human History, the Monterey Bay Aquarium and the
University of California, Santa Cruz, among others, has resulted in a
first-of-its-kind interdisciplinary study published in Scientific Reports,
combining ten years of observations of sea otters with archaeological methods
to analyze sea otter use of such anvil stones, also known as emergent anvils.
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