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Sociality in river otters: cooperative foraging or reproductive strategies?
Authors:Blundell  Gail M; Ben-David  Merav; Bowyer  R Terry
Institution:a Institute of Arctic Biology, Alaska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit and Department of Biology and Wildlife, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775-7000, USA b Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY 82071, USA
Abstract:We evaluated factors influencing social organization in coastalriver otters (Lontra canadensis) to test two hypotheses: groupformation is an antipredation strategy, or, alternatively,group information is related to cooperative foraging. Dataon group size, group composition, and sociality were obtainedthrough radiotracking 55 otters in Prince William Sound, Alaska, USA, from 1996 through 1998. For males, larger groups occurredafter the mating season and concurrent with availability ofschooling pelagic fishes. Stable isotope analysis revealedthat otters social in >10% of their locations had dietssignificantly higher in rapidly swimming pelagic fishes thandid less social otters, regardless of gender. In addition, ottersthat were more social had significantly smaller home rangesthan did less social otters, an observation consistent withincreased foraging efficiency through cooperative foraging.Discounting associations of females with young of the year,approximately 47% of females and only 24% of males were asocial.Among social otters, males were social in 46% of their locationsand 63% of that time occurred in all-male groups. Females wereonly social in 26% of locations and were in mixed-sex groups78% of that time. We hypothesize that the time-consuming taskof raising offspring prevents females from joining foraginggroups. When not raising young, females may join males to cooperativelyforage for better-quality prey (pelagic fishes), which wouldbe more difficult to acquire as a solitary forager.
Keywords:Alaska  Lontra canadensis  predation risk  river otters  schooling pelagic fishes  sexual dietary partitioning  sexual dimorphism  social organization  stable isotopes  
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