The following short note was published recently:

 

Parra, G.J. 2007. Observations of an Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin carrying
a sponge: object play or tool use? Mammalia 71(3): 147-149.

 

 

Abstract

Wild and captive delphinids are known to carry animate and inanimate objects
on their rostra, melons, fins and tail flukes. Here I describe a sponge
carrying event by an adult Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin and discuss the
potential functions of this behaviour in light of the observations made. The
observations took place on November 9, 2006, during boat based surveys of
coastal dolphins in the Hinchinbrook Channel (18o 16'S, 146o 04'E),
northeast Queensland, Australia. The preliminary observations suggest the
humpback dolphin was using the sponge, in some unknown way, while foraging.
Humpback dolphins feed on a wide variety of estuarine fishes including
bottom-dwelling species that posses serrated spines able to harm and kill
dolphins. It is feasible that the humpback dolphin may have used the sponge
as a "protective glove" while searching for food in the bottom. Future
research is needed to assess if the behaviour described here is an
isolated/random case or a foraging specialization involving tool-use. 

If you would like to receive a PDF copy, please email me: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

Thank you.

 

Guido

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Guido J. Parra, PhD

Postdoctoral Fellow

School of Veterinary Science

University of Queensland

St Lucia, QLD 4072, Australia

Ph: (07) 3365-3066 Mob: 0437630843

Fax: (07) 3365-1255 Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Webpage: http://www.uq.edu.au/vetschool/index.html?page=47564
<http://www.uq.edu.au/vetschool/index.html?page=47564&pid=47559> &pid=47559

Behavioural Ecology Research Group: http: //www.uq.edu.au/berg/

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to