the ecological conditions that favor tool use and innovation in wild bottlenose dolphins (tursiops sp.)生态条件,支持工具的使用和创新在野生宽吻海豚(语sp)。.pdf
文本预览下载声明
The Ecological Conditions That Favor Tool Use and
Innovation in Wild Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops sp.)
Eric M. Patterson*, Janet Mann
Department of Biology, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C., United States of America
Abstract
Dolphins are well known for their exquisite echolocation abilities, which enable them to detect and discriminate prey
species and even locate buried prey. While these skills are widely used during foraging, some dolphins use tools to locate
and extract prey. In the only known case of tool use in free-ranging cetaceans, a subset of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops sp.)
in Shark Bay, Western Australia habitually employs marine basket sponge tools to locate and ferret prey from the seafloor.
While it is clear that sponges protect dolphins’ rostra while searching for prey, it is still not known why dolphins probe the
substrate at all instead of merely echolocating for buried prey as documented at other sites. By ‘sponge foraging’ ourselves,
we show that these dolphins target prey that both lack swimbladders and burrow in a rubble-littered substrate. Delphinid
echolocation and vision are critical for hunting but less effective on such prey. Consequently, if dolphins are to access this
burrowing, swimbladderless prey, they must probe the seafloor and in turn benefit from using protective sponges. We
suggest that these tools have allowed sponge foraging dolphins to exploit an empty niche inaccessible to their non-tool-
using counterparts. Our study identifies the underlying ecological basis of dolphin tool use and strengthens our
understanding of the conditions that favor tool use and innovation in the wild.
Citation: Patterson EM, Mann J (2011) The Ecological Conditions That Favor Tool Use and Innovation in Wild Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops sp.). PLoS ONE 6(7):
e22243. doi:10.
显示全部