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the conduit to scientists and specialists that empowers people to protect whales, dolphins and porpoises, their cultures and their homes.
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| words from the wise: Dr David Lusseau |
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I am trying to understand the principles governing the dynamics and evolution of interactions in complex adaptive systems. I am particularly focussing on social interactions in animal populations and I am interested in understanding how environmental variability, both natural and anthropogenic, influences them. |

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Posted: 2007 December 30 |
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Contact http://www.lusseau.org/ |
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| latest wise words |
A killer whale social network is vulnerable to targeted removals
Rob Williams and David Lusseau
Individuals play various roles in maintaining social integrity of mammalian populations. However, many models developed for managing wildlife resources assume that all individuals are equal. Killer whales are social animals that rely on relationships within and among family groups for survival. In the northeastern Pacific, fish-eating, ‘resident’ killer whale populations are composed of matrilines from which offspring do not disperse. We analysed the influence of various individuals' age, sex and matrilineal affiliation on their position in a social network. Here, we show that some matrilines appeared to play more central roles than others in the network. Furthermore, juvenile whales, especially females, appeared to play a central role in maintaining network cohesion. These two key findings were supported subsequently by simulating removal of different individuals. The network was robust to random removals; however, simulations that mimicked historic live-captures from the northeastern Pacific were likely to break the network graph into isolated groups. This finding raises concern regarding targeted takes, such as live-capture or drive fisheries, of matrilineal cetaceans.
A note from whales-online.org This paper is originally published by Royal Society Publishing in Biology Letters
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Related PDFs
A killer whale social network is vulnerable to targeted removals |
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