A new article on bottlenose dolphin social structure, proposing a relatively 
novel method to define associations, has just been published in Aquatic 
Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems. 
 
You are welcome to contact the first author <silvia.bonizz...@gmail.com> to 
request a pdf copy.
 
Bonizzoni S., Genov T., Bearzi G. 2022. Bottlenose dolphins share fish farm 
areas while maintaining sexual segregation: investigating group memberships 
through spatially and temporally explicit parameters. Aquatic Conservation: 
Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems. https://doi.org/10.1002/aqc.3908
 
ABSTRACT
1. Group membership is a key attribute of animal societies and central to the 
study of social structure in several taxa. However, social structure analyses 
are sensitive to the way data are collected and associations defined. 
2. In this study, a time–space method was used to investigate the social 
structure of common bottlenose dolphins *Tursiops truncatus* observed and 
photographed across 7 years in the semi-enclosed Gulf of Corinth, Greece. 
Instead of adopting traditional group definitions, individuals were considered 
as being members of the same group if photographed within a specific time and 
space window. This approach can be applied post hoc across studies and can 
offer advantages under challenging sampling conditions (e.g. when dealing with 
groups spread over vast areas or when group membership is otherwise hard to 
assess). 
3. Dolphins were mostly found around coastal cage aquaculture facilities 
farming European sea bass *Dicentrarchus labrax* and gilthead seabream *Sparus 
aurata*. 
4. Dolphins formed clusters largely or entirely composed of individuals of the 
same sex, suggestive of sex-based homophily. Habitat partitioning was not 
detected: there was substantial spatial overlap among dolphin clusters, with 
all individuals using a relatively small area in the northern portion of the 
Gulf, where most of the productive fish farms were located. Associations 
between females were stronger than those between males, and daughters tended to 
stay in the group of their mothers. 
5. Sex-based social clustering may allow females and calves to limit 
interactions with potentially aggressive males, while individuals of both sexes 
benefit from prey concentrated around fish farms. 
6. Adaptation to foraging around farms can result in trade-offs between the 
costs and benefits of nourishment and social interaction. This may have both 
positive or negative effects on the animals that should be considered in the 
context of ensuring their favourable conservation status.


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Giovanni Bearzi
http://www.dolphinbiology.org/people/giovanni_bearzi.htm
 
 




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