Dolphin social phenotypes vary in response to food availability but not the North Atlantic Oscillation index

David Fisher* (Corresponding Author), Barbara Cheney

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Social behaviours can allow individuals to flexibly respond to environmental change, potentially buffering adverse effects. However, individuals may respond differently to the same environmental stimulus, complicating predictions for population-level response to environmental change. Here, we show that bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) alter their social behaviour at yearly and monthly scales in response to a proxy for food availability (salmon abundance) but do not respond to variation in a proxy for climate (the North Atlantic Oscillation index). There was also individual variation in plasticity for gregariousness and connectedness to distant parts of the social network, although these traits showed limited repeatability. By contrast, individuals showed consistent differences in clustering with their immediate social environment at the yearly scale but no individual variation in plasticity for this trait at either timescale. These results indicate that social behaviour in free-ranging cetaceans can be highly resource dependent with individuals increasing their connectedness over short timescales but possibly reducing their wider range of connection at longer timescales. Some social traits showed more individual variation in plasticity or mean behaviour than others, highlighting how predictions for the responses of populations to environmental variation must consider the type of individual variation present in the population.
Original languageEnglish
JournalProceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume290
Issue number2008
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11 Oct 2023

Bibliographical note

Open Access via the Royal Society Agreement
Funding
We received no direct funding for this particular study.
Acknowledgements
We are indebted to Paul Thompson for conception and development of this long-term individual-based research study, and for advice during this work. We are especially grateful to our colleagues at the Lighthouse Field Station, past and present, who have contributed to and advanced this long-term study. Matthew Silk, Dan Blumstein and two anonymous reviewers made numerous useful comments and suggestions on an earlier draft. This long-term study has depended upon a number of funders including University of Aberdeen, NatureScot, Beatrice Offshore Windfarm Ltd., Moray Offshore Renewables Ltd., Marine Scotland, the Crown Estate, Highlands and Islands Enterprise, the BES, ASAB, Greenpeace Environmental Trust, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, Talisman Energy (UK) Ltd., Department of Energy and Climate Change, Chevron and Natural Environment Research. Survey work was conducted under NatureScot Animal Scientific Licences.

Data Availability Statement

Electronic supplementary material, Data and R code to recreate the analyses are available through FigShare at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6856033.

Keywords

  • dolphins
  • social network
  • plasticity
  • environmental change
  • Trusiops
  • inidvidual variation

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