Litcius/Paper detail

Social structure of killer whales (<scp><i>Orcinus orca</i></scp>) in a variable low‐latitude environment, the Galápagos Archipelago

Judith Denkinger, Daniela Alarcón‐Ruales, Bitinia Espinosa, Lynn Elizabeth Fowler, Cindy Manning, Javier Onã, Daniel M. Palacios

2020Marine Mammal Science22 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Killer whales ( Orcinus orca ) have strong social matrilineal bonds and form groups and long‐lasting associations, but little is known about their population or social structure in an equatorial setting such as the waters around the Galápagos Islands. Using 91 encounters and identification photographs from 1991 to 2017, we identified 64 killer whales of which 18 individuals were locals with high resighting rates. Group size was small, ranging from 1 to 15 animals, with 69% of the groups containing four or fewer animals. Using social network analysis (SOCPROG 2.7) whales grouped into three distinct units and one loose association with frequent exchange between different groups. One male–male unit showed a strong association (association strength = 0.55). Overall, associations lasted over at least 3 years. Our data give first evidence of a loose social organization of Galápagos killer whales, similar to fission‐fusion societies.

Topics & Concepts

ArchipelagoWhaleBiologyAssociation (psychology)PopulationSocial organizationGeographyZoologyDemographyEcologyPsychologySociologyAnthropologyPsychotherapistMarine animal studies overviewMarine and coastal plant biologyAnimal Vocal Communication and Behavior