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Social Ecology of Feeding in an Open Ocean

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Part of the book series: Ethology and Behavioral Ecology of Marine Mammals ((EBEMM))

Abstract

Odontocetes typically live in groups, and strengths of associations among individuals likely affect coordination of behaviors while avoiding predators, having sex, rearing young, and locating, containing, and capturing prey. In this chapter, I concentrate on food. In determining “good” locations to search for prey, odontocetes likely use prior knowledge about their environment, either newly acquired or shared by others. To locate prey, odontocetes use a combination of echolocation, hearing, and sight, and these sensory as well as other potential modalities are likely combined in subtle ways to facilitate searching for prey as a group. After locating prey, toothed dolphins and whales at times work together to contain prey. Social prey containment occurs if the costs of containing prey increase feeding efficiency sufficiently to make it worthwhile to expend the energy. Benefits of coordinating behaviors to capture prey include increasing capture efficiency by working together to briefly disorganize a fish school, trap prey between dolphins, or debilitate prey. While much of this chapter focuses on epipelagic and mesopelagic odontocetes, we are learning more about how deep-diving dolphins and whales forage, and coordination there seems likely as well.

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Acknowledgments

I thank Steven Hirshorn for his endless support, Douglas Van Houten for his deep inspiration, and Kathy Joseph for her insightful comments and suggestions on an earlier draft. And I thank the dolphins and whales, for being there, in the depths.

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Vaughn-Hirshorn, R. (2019). Social Ecology of Feeding in an Open Ocean. In: Würsig, B. (eds) Ethology and Behavioral Ecology of Odontocetes. Ethology and Behavioral Ecology of Marine Mammals. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-16663-2_3

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