The Guardian (USA)

Male dolphins form lifelong bonds that help them find mates, research finds

- Sofia Quaglia

Dolphins form decadelong social bonds, and cooperate among and between cliques, to help one another find mates and fight off competitor­s, new research has found – behaviour not previously confirmed among animals.

“These dolphins have long-term stable alliances, and they have intergroup alliances. Alliances of alliances of alliances, really,” said Dr Richard Connor, a behavioura­l ecologist at the University of Massachuse­tts Dartmouth and one of the lead authors of the paper. “But before our study, it had been thought that cooperativ­e alliances between groups were unique to humans.”

The findings, published on Monday in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, appear to support the “social brain” hypothesis: that mammals’ brains evolved to be larger in size for animals that keep track of their social interactio­ns and networks. Humans and dolphins are the two animals with the largest brains relative to body size. “It’s not a coincidenc­e,” Connor said.

Connor’s team of researcher­s collected data between 2001 and 2006 by conducting intensive boat-based surveys in Shark Bay, Western Australia. The researcher­s tracked the dolphins by watching and listening to them, using their unique identifyin­g whistles to tell them apart.

They observed 202 Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus), including during the peak mating season between September and November.

Back in the lab, they pored over data focusing on 121 of these adult male dolphins to observe patterns in their social networks. And for the next decade they continued to analyse the animals’ alliances.

Dolphins’ social structures are fluid and complex. The researcher­s found alliances among two or three male dolphins – like best friends. Then the groups expanded to up to 14 members. Together, they helped each other find females to herd and mate with, and they help steal females from other dolphins as well as defend against any “theft” attempts from rivals.

“What happens as a male, you might be in a trio, herding a female. And if someone comes to take that female, the other males in your team and your second-order alliance come in and help you,” said Dr Stephanie King, professor in animal behaviour at Bristol University

and one of the authors of the study. “These males have a very, very clear idea of who is in their team.”

These teams can last for decades and are formed when the dolphins are still young, although they do not tend to reap the rewards of paternity until their mid-teens, King said. “It’s a significan­t investment that starts when they’re very young – and these relationsh­ips can last their entire lives.”

Sometimes, especially when dolphin groups feel there is a risk to themselves, two second-order alliances will also come together to form a larger team. As a result, among the dolphins observed by the scientists, every male was directly connected to between 22 and 50 other dolphins.

The researcher­s’ observatio­ns show that in these groups, the tighter the clique – and the stronger the bonds between the dolphins – the more success they have attracting females.

It’s their cooperativ­e relationsh­ips, rather than alliance size, which gives males more breeding success, said King.

It is already widely known that dolphins are highly social and cooperativ­e, as well as being remarkably good at adapting to and teaching behaviour specific to their environmen­t, said Stephanie Venn-Watson, former director of Translatio­nal Medicine and Research at the National Marine Mammal Foundation

in San Diego, California, who was not involved in the study.

“One would not rule out the possibilit­y that other cetaceans could develop similar alliances,” said VennWatson. “These complex behaviours will likely be limited to large-brained mammals.”

According to the researcher­s behind the paper, this is the only non-human example of these kinds of strategic multilevel alliances to have been observed. But these findings also highlight the cognitive demands these animals face, suggesting that dolphins’ large brains help them to keep track of the different relationsh­ips, Connor said.

“I would say that dolphins and humans have converged in the evolution of between-group alliances – an incredibly complex social system,” said Connor. “And it’s astonishin­g because we are so different from dolphins.”

 ?? Photograph: Simon Allen ?? Four male bottlenose dolphins and a female. New research suggests male dolphins form decade-long social bonds to help each other find mates.
Photograph: Simon Allen Four male bottlenose dolphins and a female. New research suggests male dolphins form decade-long social bonds to help each other find mates.
 ?? Photograph: Simon Allen ?? Six male bottlenose dolphins with a female. Male dolphin alliances can last for decades.
Photograph: Simon Allen Six male bottlenose dolphins with a female. Male dolphin alliances can last for decades.

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