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A new approach to the study of relationship quality in dolphins: Framework and preliminary results

•A method used to study primates and raven relationship quality applied to dolphins.•Pilot study to set up behavioural variables allowing comparison among three taxa.•Focusing on contact, pair swimming, and play to study dolphin relationship quality.•Using principal component analysis to extract dol...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Behavioural processes 2020-12, Vol.181, p.104260-104260, Article 104260
Main Authors: Themelin, Manon, Ribic, Christine A., Melillo-Sweeting, Kel, Dudzinski, Kathleen M.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•A method used to study primates and raven relationship quality applied to dolphins.•Pilot study to set up behavioural variables allowing comparison among three taxa.•Focusing on contact, pair swimming, and play to study dolphin relationship quality.•Using principal component analysis to extract dolphin relationship quality components.•Investigating dolphin social interactions using underwater observations. Proximity and synchronous behaviours from surface observations have been used to measure association patterns within and between dolphin dyads. To facilitate an investigation of relationship quality in dolphins, we applied a method used for primates and ravens that examined three main components to describe relationships: value, security, and compatibility. Using pilot data from long-term research of two study populations for this preliminary assessment, these three components were extracted from PCA of eight behavioural variables with more than 80 % variance accounted for in both study groups. Only pair swim position differed between groups. Although value, security, and compatibility are abstract terms, each is based on behaviours identified as important in dolphin social life, at least for these two populations. Examining relationship quality in dolphins with a method used to illustrate dyadic differences for primates and ravens allows for a quantitative, comparative assessment of sociality across disparate taxa. Although these species are diverse in their anatomies and in their social habitats (e.g., aquatic, terrestrial, aerial), they may well share the basic societal building blocks in the factors affecting how relationships are formed. We discuss how an examination of these behavioural variables facilitates understanding relationship quality in dolphins, as well as how dolphin relationships fit into the context of social animals’ society.
ISSN:0376-6357
1872-8308
DOI:10.1016/j.beproc.2020.104260