Buy this book
Research on cetacean social behavior is in transition from descriptive natural history to quantitative analyses. To expedite this change, an intellectual history of the field is provided, from the early whaler-naturalists to oceanarium observations, whale carcass studies, pseudo-scientific inquiries into human-dolphin communication, and longterm field studies. Subsequent chapters illustrate use of systematic methodologies to better understand bottlenose dolphin social relations. Samuels and Gifford adapted a quantitative technique from primate behavioral research to study agonism among captive dolphins. Males were dominant to females; females had stable, age-ordered dominance relations; and two males had a changeable dominance relationship. Sex differences in dominance relations generated predictions about the behavior of wild dolphins that can be tested using this technique. Samuels, Richards and Mann investigated the association of wild juvenile dolphins with their mothers after weaning. Juvenile daughters continued to associate with their mothers, whereas juvenile sons rarely did so even though they remained in the same area as their mothers. Sex differences in juvenile association patterns appeared to foreshadow adult social networks. Samuels and Spradlin applied quantitative behavioral techniques to evaluate dolphin behavior in Swim-With-Dolphins programs. Two program types were defined by presence ("Controlled") or absence (''Not-Controlled'') of explicit trainer regulation of dolphin-with-human interactions. In "Not-Controlled" programs, the behavior of dolphins and humans theatened human safety and dolphin well-being, whereas "Controlled" programs effectively minimized behaviors that posed risk to dolphins or humans.
Buy this book
Subjects
Behavior, Bottlenosed dolphinsEdition | Availability |
---|---|
1
A systematic approach to measuring the social behavior of bottlenose dolphins
1996, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
in English
|
aaaa
|
Book Details
Edition Notes
"September 1996."
"Technical report."
"Originally issued as the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 1996."
Includes bibliographical references.
Also issued online.
The Physical Object
Edition Identifiers
Work Identifiers
Community Reviews (0)
December 3, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Added subjects from MARC records. |
December 11, 2009 | Created by WorkBot | add works page |