New publication on false killer whale social clusters in Hawai‘i.

Mahaffy, S.D., R.W. Baird, A.E. Harnish, T. Cullins, S.H. Stack, J.J. Currie, 
A.L. Bradford, D.R. Salden, and K.K. Martien. 2023. Identifying Social Clusters 
of Endangered Main Hawaiian Islands False Killer Whales. Endangered Species 
Research 51:249-268 doi: 10.3354/esr01258

The paper is open access: 
https://www.int-res.com/articles/esr2023/51/n051p249.pdf

ABSTRACT: The presence of distinct social groups within an animal population 
can result in heterogeneity in many aspects of its life history and ecology. 
The ability to accurately assess social group membership increases with the 
number of times individuals are identified, but obtaining sufficient sightings 
of rarely-encountered species can be difficult. Three social clusters were 
previously identified for the endangered population of false killer whales 
Pseudorca crassidens around the main Hawaiian Islands, using modularity among 
associations within a 12-year photographic dataset with no restrictions on the 
number of times seen. In this study, we used photo-identification data over a 
23-year period to reassess the number and membership of social clusters within 
the population, restricting analyses to individuals seen on at least five 
different days. We compared the robustness of clustering assignments from six 
community detection algorithms using modularity and found that the three 
highest-ranking algorithms all identified the same number (four) and membership 
of social clusters. Spatial use of clusters varied among the islands, with 
three of the four clusters encountered regularly only off one or two of the 
three main island study areas. Comparison of genetic differentiation between 
social clusters revealed significant differentiation in nuclear DNA among 
clusters. Furthermore, all individuals in two of the clusters possess the same 
mitochondrial DNA haplotype, while in the other two clusters approximately 40% 
of animals possess a second haplotype. This level of clustering and associated 
heterogeneity within the population may have implications for mark-recapture 
abundance estimation, as well as for mitigating exposure to anthropogenic 
activities, including interactions with fisheries.



HŌʻULUʻULU MANAʻO
Pili nā ʻano like ʻole o ka nohona a me ke kālaikaiaola o nā pūʻuo holoholona i 
ka loaʻa ʻana o nā pūʻulu kikoʻī. Piʻi aʻe ka hiki ke helu kūponoʻia ka 
māhuahua ʻana o nā heluna o ia mau pūʻulu i ka helu ʻana i nā wā e ʻike ʻia ai 
kēlā me kēia holoholona, ʻo ka lawa ʻana naʻe o ka ʻike ʻana i nā lāhulu ʻane 
halapohe kekahi ālaina. Hōʻia ʻia ʻekolu pūʻulu o ke koholā ʻane halapohe, ʻo 
ka Pseudorca crassidens, a puni nā mokupuni nui ʻewalu o Hawaiʻi, ma ka 
hoʻowaeʻanona ʻana i ka pilina i loko o kekahi ʻikepili kiʻa he ʻumikūmālua 
makahiki me ke kāohi ʻole i ka nui o ka ʻike ʻia ʻana. Ma kēia kilo ʻana, ua 
hoʻohana mākou i ka ʻikepili ma o nā makahiki he iwakāluakūmākolu i mea e 
hōʻoia hou ai i ka heluna a me nā lālā o nā pūʻulu launa i loko o kekahi pūʻuo 
holoholona, a pāpā ʻia nā kālailaina i nā mea i ʻike ʻia ma ʻelima mau lā 
ʻokoʻa ma ka liʻiliʻi loa. Hoʻohālikelike mākou i ke ʻano me ka ikaika o kēia 
mau pūʻulu launa ma ka hoʻohana ʻana i ka hoʻowaeʻanona ʻana ma ʻeono pūʻulu 
haʻilula a ʻo ka mea i loaʻa, ʻo ia hoʻi ka ʻike ʻana, ma o nā haʻilula nui 
ʻekolu, i ka heluna a me ka lālā hoʻokahi o nā pūʻulu launa. Loli ka hoʻohana 
ʻana i ke koana o nā pūʻulu ma waena o nā mokupuni, ʻike ʻia ʻekolu pūʻulu ma 
hoʻokahi a ʻelua paha mokupuni mai loko mai o nā mokupuni nui ʻekolu e kālailai 
ʻia ana. Ma ka hoʻohālikelike ʻana aku i nā hiʻohiʻona ōewe ʻokoʻa o nā pūʻulu 
launa, ʻike ʻia ka ʻokoʻa ʻano nui ma ka piko ōewe o nā pūʻulu. A no laila, 
loaʻa i nā mea a pau o ia mau pūʻulu ʻelua ke ōewe hoʻoilina hoʻokahi, a ma nā 
pūʻulu ʻē aʻe ʻelua, loaʻa he hiʻohiʻona ōewe ʻelua i nā holoholona he 40 
pākēneka. Hiki nō paha i kēia ʻano hoʻopūʻulu ʻana me kēia ʻano waeʻanona ōewe 
hoʻopili ma kekahi pūʻuo ke pili i ke kuhi ʻana i ka nui ma ka hopu kaha ʻana, 
a i ke kāohi a hoʻēmi ʻana mai i nā hopena o nā hana kanaka, e laʻa hoʻi me ka 
hana ma ke kai lawaiʻa.


If you are interested in more information on our Hawai‘i publications see 
https://cascadiaresearch.org/hawaii_publications/
[https://cascadiaresearch.org/files/2022/04/cascadia-logo-no-words.svg]<https://cascadiaresearch.org/hawaii_publications/>
Publications, reports and presentations based in whole or in part on our 
Hawai‘i research - 
https://cascadiaresearch.org<https://cascadiaresearch.org/hawaii_publications/>
Peer-reviewed publications The following is a list of publications based in 
whole or in part on our work or that we have contributed to on Hawaiian whales 
and dolphins. PDF copies of most of our peer-reviewed publications, graduate 
theses, popular articles, contract reports, government reports, and many of our 
recent conference presentations can be downloaded below. If there is a
cascadiaresearch.org

Cheers,
Sabre
-----------------------------------------
Sabre Mahaffy, M.Sc.
Research Biologist
Cascadia Research Collective
218 1/2 W. 4th Ave.
Olympia, WA 98501

www.cascadiaresearch.org
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