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Kinship and association in a highly social apex predator population, killer whales at Marion Island

Kinship and association in a highly social apex predator population, killer whales at Marion Island
Kinship and association in a highly social apex predator population, killer whales at Marion Island

Social structure is a core element of population biology, influenced by intrinsic and environmental factors. Intra-taxon comparisons of social organization are useful in elucidating the role of such ecological determinants of sociality. Killer whales Orcinus orca are widely distributed, social delphinids with diverse morphology, diet, behaviour, and genetics, but few studies have quantitatively examined social structure in this species. We used 7 years of individual identification data on killer whales at Marion Island, Southern Ocean, to calculate the half-weight association index among 39 individuals, creating a weighted association network. There were long-term associations between individuals, though associations were dynamic over time. We defined 8 social modules using a community detection algorithm and these typically contained 3 individuals of various ages and sexes. Pairwise genetic relatedness among 20 individuals was not significantly correlated with association index. Individuals were on average more related within than between social modules, but social modules contained related as well as unrelated individuals. Likely parent pairs of 6 individuals indicated mating between social modules.

delphinids, group, network, predators, relatedness, social structure, sociality, socio-ecology.
1045-2249
750-759
Reisinger, Ryan R.
4eaf9440-48e5-41fa-853f-d46457e5444e
Beukes Née Janse Van Rensburg, Charlene
6a7b07a5-b34d-4827-b485-5b7e78f548cd
Hoelzel, A. Rus
2832caad-4faa-414f-85d2-3936e9abb37a
De Bruyn, P. J.Nico
3257867f-eda3-4ddf-baa3-aaf692de19bb
Reisinger, Ryan R.
4eaf9440-48e5-41fa-853f-d46457e5444e
Beukes Née Janse Van Rensburg, Charlene
6a7b07a5-b34d-4827-b485-5b7e78f548cd
Hoelzel, A. Rus
2832caad-4faa-414f-85d2-3936e9abb37a
De Bruyn, P. J.Nico
3257867f-eda3-4ddf-baa3-aaf692de19bb

Reisinger, Ryan R., Beukes Née Janse Van Rensburg, Charlene, Hoelzel, A. Rus and De Bruyn, P. J.Nico (2017) Kinship and association in a highly social apex predator population, killer whales at Marion Island. Behavioral Ecology, 28 (3), 750-759. (doi:10.1093/beheco/arx034).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Social structure is a core element of population biology, influenced by intrinsic and environmental factors. Intra-taxon comparisons of social organization are useful in elucidating the role of such ecological determinants of sociality. Killer whales Orcinus orca are widely distributed, social delphinids with diverse morphology, diet, behaviour, and genetics, but few studies have quantitatively examined social structure in this species. We used 7 years of individual identification data on killer whales at Marion Island, Southern Ocean, to calculate the half-weight association index among 39 individuals, creating a weighted association network. There were long-term associations between individuals, though associations were dynamic over time. We defined 8 social modules using a community detection algorithm and these typically contained 3 individuals of various ages and sexes. Pairwise genetic relatedness among 20 individuals was not significantly correlated with association index. Individuals were on average more related within than between social modules, but social modules contained related as well as unrelated individuals. Likely parent pairs of 6 individuals indicated mating between social modules.

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More information

Published date: 1 May 2017
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology. All rights reserved. Copyright: Copyright 2017 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
Keywords: delphinids, group, network, predators, relatedness, social structure, sociality, socio-ecology.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 455634
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/455634
ISSN: 1045-2249
PURE UUID: 8df40349-ea52-482d-bf51-0ebb06e71b78
ORCID for Ryan R. Reisinger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8933-6875

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 29 Mar 2022 16:47
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:08

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Contributors

Author: Charlene Beukes Née Janse Van Rensburg
Author: A. Rus Hoelzel
Author: P. J.Nico De Bruyn

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