Dear colleagues

We are pleased to announce the recent publication of the following research 
paper in Ethology:

Cusick, J. A., Herzing, D. L. (2014), The Dynamic of Aggression: How Individual 
and Group Factors Affect the Long-Term Interspecific Aggression Between Two 
Sympatric Species of Dolphin. Ethology. 120, 287-303 doi: 10.1111/eth.12204

Abstract:
Interspecific aggression, similar to intergroup conspecific aggression, has 
been observed in a variety of taxa. The dominant group or individual is 
determined by multiple aggressive events and can be influenced by the size, 
age, or group size of the participating individuals. Interspecific aggression 
between Atlantic bottlenose (Tursiops truncatus) and spotted (Stenella 
frontalis) dolphins, both resident and sympatric to Little Bahama Bank, the 
Bahamas has been consistently observed for over two decades. However, it is 
unclear whether one species is more dominant and little is known about the 
factors that influence the progression of aggression. For this study, 
underwater video recordings of 32 aggressive encounters composed of 451 
aggressive behavioural events were analysed over a 12-yr period (1993–2004). 
These were used to describe the interspecific aggression observed and quantify 
which factors (the species and age class of the participants or the group size 
and behaviour of spotted dolphin groups) had the strongest impact on the 
progression and outcome of aggression. Over the long term, interspecific 
aggression was bidirectional with neither species being more dominant. During a 
single encounter, spotted dolphin group synchrony had the strongest impact on 
the dynamic of aggression, specifically impacting which group (1) initiated 
aggression, (2) the direction of aggression and (3) the occurrence of dynamic 
shifts or dominance reversals. This is the first study to quantify the dynamic 
of aggression for this population, to document bidirectional aggression and 
dynamic shifts during long-term interspecific aggression in free-ranging 
delphinids, and this study quantifies the role of synchrony during 
interspecific aggression using underwater observations.

A pdf copy of this paper can be obtained through the following link:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/eth.12204/abstract

Reprint requests can be sent to Jessica Cusick: [email protected]

Best
Jessica A. Cusick and Denise L. Herzing

__
Jessica A. Cusick
Department of Biological Science
Florida State University
Tallahassee, FL 32306
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