Established in 2020 Wednesday, April 17, 2024


Swan River dolphins form 'bromances' to secure females, study finds
Move over Goose and Iceman, bottlenose dolphins in Perth’s Swan Canning Riverpark are working together as wingmen, or finmen, to acquire potential mates. Image courtesy: Murdoch University.



PERTH.- Murdoch University marine biologist Dr. Delphine Chabanne has discovered evidence of male alliance in Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins, the first time such behavior has been recorded outside of Western Australia's famed Shark Bay.

A Research Fellow at the Centre for Sustainable Aquatic Ecosystems at Murdoch's Harry Butler Institute, Dr. Chabanne has been studying Perth's dolphins for more than a decade.

Her recent discovery suggests male alliances are not unique to the Shark Bay dolphin population and extends the understanding of the evolutionary and ecological processes that drive alliance formation.

Dr. Chabanne used long-term photo-identification records and social analyzes to assess whether such alliances also occur in smaller and more isolated settings, and documented behaviors that showed the male alliances occur in a reproductive context.

A male dolphin named Bottomslice was observed performing a "rooster strut," a sexual display in the presence of estrus females, during which the male bobs his head up and down at the water surface while moving forward.

The dolphins would also help each other find females and were seen guarding their potential mates.

"Often, as we observe a group with a female and a male alliance, the female will be in front while the males will follow behind or on each other side of the female," Dr. Chabanne said.

"Our work revealed strong social bonds and long-term, non-random associations among individual males.

"Behavioral observations of alliances interacting with potentially receptive adult females, and exhibiting sexual display behaviors near females, suggest that these alliances occur in a reproductive context.

"Our findings are significant and exciting because this is the first formal analysis indicating the occurrence of male alliances outside Shark Bay along the vast western coastline of Australia."

The Swan Canning Riverpark is home to a small community of 12 adult, six juvenile, and six calf Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins that are year-round residents.

From June 2011 to March 2017, Dr. Chabanne conducted 187 surveys and tallied 250 useable dolphin group sightings from 304 recorded.

The findings have been published in Mammalian Biology.







Today's News

December 4, 2022

Ancient DNA from medieval Germany tells origin story of Ashkenazi Jews

New space instrument to peer at light reflecting from Earth, achieve record accuracy

Researchers discover what causes some icicles to form with ripples

New chip-scale laser isolator opens new research avenues in photonics

Researchers analyze hair to study war trauma among Syrian refugee children

James Webb telescope produces an unparalleled view of the ghostly light in galaxy clusters

Positively charged nanomaterials treat obesity anywhere you want

Wildlife study: Cheetah marking trees are hotspots for communication among other species as well

New potential mechanism for vision loss discovered

An easy way for dairy farmers to reduce their climate impact

Seeing more with a needle-shaped laser

Discovery of a novel quantum state analogous to water that won't freeze

Swan River dolphins form 'bromances' to secure females, study finds

Earthquake lab experiments produce aftershock-like behavior

Amateur scientists have helped astronomers identify nearly a quarter-million galaxies

Study discovers microbial communities shift while a coral 'sleeps' through the winter

Changing the color of quantum light on an integrated chip

Astronomers explore origin of optical variability in emission-line galaxies



 


Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the ResearchNews newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful