Dear colleagues,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am pleased to announce our new publication in
Scientific Reports.

Amano, M., Y. Kawano, T. Kubo, T. Kuwahara, and H. Kobayashi. 2021. 
Population-level laterality in foraging finless porpoises. Scientific Reports 
11:21164.

The article is open access and can be found here:
https://rdcu.be/cAgIU

Abstract
Laterality has been reported in many vertebrates, and asymmetrical cerebral 
hemisphere function has been hypothesized to cause a left‑bias in social 
behavior and a right‑bias in feeding behavior. In this paper, we provide the 
first report of behavioral laterality in free‑ranging finless porpoises, which 
seems to support the aforementioned hypothesis. We observed the turning 
behavior of finless porpoises in Omura Bay, Japan, using land‑based and 
unmanned aerial system observations. We found a strong tendency in finless 
porpoises to turn counterclockwise with their right side down when pursuing and 
catching fish at the surface of the water. Our results suggest that this 
population of finless porpoises shows consistent right‑biased laterality. 
Right‑biased laterality has been observed in various foraging cetaceans and is 
usually explained by the dominance of the right eye‑left cerebral hemisphere in 
prey recognition; however, right‑biased laterality in foraging cetaceans may 
have multiple causes.

Best regards,
Masao Amano
Graduate School of Fisheries and Environmental Sciences, Nagasaki University
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