Dear Marmam Members,

My colleagues and I would like to announce the recent publication of our latest 
paper:

Morteo E., Rocha-Olivares A., Abarca-Arenas L.G. 2014. Sexual segregation in 
coastal bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in the south-western Gulf of 
Mexico. Aquatic Mammals, 40(4):375-385. ISSN: 1996-7292, doi: 
10.1578/AM.40.4.2014.375

Abstract:

Cetaceans are highly mobile species with complex social structures, aspects 
that play an important role in their fitness such as survival and offspring 
production. Population dispersal influences the dynamics of social species, 
which may vary with age, sex, or individual status, thus resulting in 
segregation; however, sex-related dispersal and social affiliations have been 
studied only in a handful of species at few locations. We conducted a 2-y 
photographic survey in an open habitat off the coast of Mexico to determine if 
site fidelity, residency, and social affiliations in male and female bottlenose 
dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) revealed sexual segregation. Forty-one surveys 
yielded 167 h of field effort and 61 h of observations. From 174 different 
individuals, we sexed 38 females and 11 males (45% positively and 55% 
tentatively). Females were more resident (p < 0.05), had higher site fidelity 
(p < 0.05), and had weaker associations (p < 0.05) with a higher number of 
partners (p < 0.05) than males and putative males. Associations were not 
dictated by differences in sample size or temporal patterns between sexes, and 
53% of recorded partnerships were preferred/avoided relationships. Although the 
composition of social interactions in the community was highly dynamic, it 
unveiled evidence of sexual segregation. Temporal and social patterns suggest 
that males may be primarily responsible for gene flow among adjacent locations. 
Female associations occurred within a large but unstable network, potentially 
resembling “bands”; conversely, males and putative males only grouped in pairs 
or trios, showing significant temporal changes in their relationships, and 
potentially resembling first- and second-order alliances. Detailed behavioral 
and genetic data are needed to unravel the social dynamics of this dolphin 
community and the mechanisms driving their evolutionary change.

Please e-mail me if you want a PDF copy ([email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>); also, please feel free to check our other 
contributions at:

http://www.uv.mx/personal/emorteo/publicaciones/ 
<http://www.uv.mx/personal/emorteo/publicaciones/> 

Cheers!

Eduardo Morteo, Dr.

Head Researcher
Marine Mammal Laboratory

Institute of Biological Research
Institute of Marine Sciences and Fisheries
Universidad Veracruzana

617 Calle Hidalgo, Col. Río Jamapa, Boca del Río, Veracruz, Mexico. CP 94290

Ph: +52 (229) 956 72 27 Ext. 114
Fax: +52 (229) 956 70 70
E-mail: [email protected]

http://www.uv.mx/personal/emorteo/

http://uv-mx.academia.edu/EMorteo
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Eduardo_Morteo/?ev=hdr_xprf

http://scholar.google.com.mx/citations?user=fDUl-IIAAAAJ

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