Dear Ladies and Gentlemen,

Please list the following post on MARMAN.

Thank you very much,

Sina

 

New publication: Cultural transmission of tool use by bottlenose dolphins 
provides access to a novel foraging niche

 

Dear Marmam Readers,

I am very pleased to announce the following publication:

Michael Krützen, Sina Kreicker, Colin D. MacLeod, Jennifer Learmonth, Anna M. 
Kopps, Pamela Walsham and Simon J. Allen (2014).

Cultural transmission of tool use by Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops 
sp.) provides access to a novel foraging niche. Proceedings of the Royal 
Society B. DOI 10.1098/rspb.2014.0374

(http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/281/1784/20140374.abstract?etoc&cited-by=yes&legid=royprsb%3B281%2F1784%2F20140374)

Abstract: Culturally transmitted tool use has important ecological and 
evolutionary consequences and has been proposed as a significant driver of 
human evolution. Such evidence is still scarce in other animals. In cetaceans, 
tool use has been inferred using indirect evidence in one population of 
Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops sp.), where particular dolphins 
(‘spongers’) use marine sponges during foraging. To date, evidence of whether 
this foraging tactic actually provides access to novel food items is lacking. 
We used fatty acid (FA) signature analysis to identify dietary differences 
between spongers and non-spongers, analysing data from 11 spongers and 27 
non-spongers from two different study sites. Both univariate and multivariate 
analyses revealed significant differences in FA profiles between spongers and 
non-spongers between and within study sites. Moreover, FA profiles differed 
significantly between spongers and non-spongers foraging within the same deep 
channel habitat, whereas the profiles of non-spongers from deep channel and 
shallow habitats at this site could not be distinguished. Our results indicate 
that sponge use by bottlenose dolphins is linked to significant differences in 
diet. It appears that cultural transmission of tool use in dolphins, as in 
humans, allows the exploitation of an otherwise unused niche.

For any questions or a pdf copy please contact [email protected] or 
[email protected]

Best wishes,

Sina



Sina Kreicker M.Sc. Biology/Anthropology

Research associate

Anthropological Institute, University of Zürich, Switzerland

www.aim.uzh.ch

Co-Director Dolphin Watch & Care for Dolphins

www.dolphinwatchalliance.org

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