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Home sweet home? Wide-ranging movements of socially stable resident Delphinids (Globicephala macrorhynchus)
Alves, F.; Alessandrini, A.; Fernandez, M.; Hartman, K.L.; Dinis, A. (2018). Home sweet home? Wide-ranging movements of socially stable resident Delphinids (Globicephala macrorhynchus). Revista Scientia Insularum 1: 37-49. https://dx.doi.org/10.25145/j.SI.2018.01.004
In: Revista Scientia Insularum. Universidad de La Laguna: Santa Cruz. ISSN 2659-6644, more

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Keywords
Author keywords
    Individual associations, photo-identification, site fidelity, temporal social patterns.

Authors  Top | Dataset 
  • Alves, F.
  • Alessandrini, A.
  • Fernandez, M.
  • Hartman, K.L.
  • Dinis, A.

Abstract
    Movement patterns of delphinid populations are generally known to occur within specific geographical areas; with the exception of the killer whale (Orcinus orca). Additionally, knowledge of wide-ranging migrations in these animals are mainly attributed to individualrecords with limited information on their social structure, residency status or purpose of migration. Here, a comparison of photographic-identification catalogues of short-finned pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus) from the two most isolated archipelagos of the North Atlantic (Madeira and Azores) shows that five well-marked adult animals have made a round-trip movement, of no less than 2000 km. These delphinids belong to the main resident pod in Madeira, where they present long-term site fidelity and were photographed in the Azores during an apparent stop (of at least 10 days), most likely for breeding or feeding purposes. The analysis of the association patterns of these individuals shows that theywere sighted together on multiple occasions during the entire study period, suggesting that they are members of a cohesive unit. These findings broaden our understanding on these animals’ home ranges and suggest caution when establishing residency status in delphinids.

Dataset
  • MONICET: Azevedo, J. M. N.; Fernández, M.; González García, L.; (2023) MONICET: long-term cetacean monitoring in the Azores based on whale watching observations (2009-2020), more

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