Preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal: complex prey handling by dolphins.

Dolphins are well known for their complex social and foraging behaviours. Direct underwater observations of wild dolphin feeding behaviour however are rare. At mass spawning aggregations of giant cuttlefish (Sepia apama) in the Upper Spencer Gulf in South Australia, a wild female Indo-Pacific bottle...

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Main Authors: Julian Finn, Tom Tregenza, Mark Norman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2626284?pdf=render
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author Julian Finn
Tom Tregenza
Mark Norman
author_facet Julian Finn
Tom Tregenza
Mark Norman
author_sort Julian Finn
collection DOAJ
description Dolphins are well known for their complex social and foraging behaviours. Direct underwater observations of wild dolphin feeding behaviour however are rare. At mass spawning aggregations of giant cuttlefish (Sepia apama) in the Upper Spencer Gulf in South Australia, a wild female Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus) was observed and recorded repeatedly catching, killing and preparing cuttlefish for consumption using a specific and ordered sequence of behaviours. Cuttlefish were herded to a sand substrate, pinned to the seafloor, killed by downward thrust, raised mid-water and beaten by the dolphin with its snout until the ink was released and drained. The deceased cuttlefish was then returned to the seafloor, inverted and forced along the sand substrate in order to strip the thin dorsal layer of skin off the mantle, thus releasing the buoyant calcareous cuttlebone. This stepped behavioural sequence significantly improves prey quality through 1) removal of the ink (with constituent melanin and tyrosine), and 2) the calcareous cuttlebone. Observations of foraging dolphin pods from above-water at this site (including the surfacing of intact clean cuttlebones) suggest that some or all of this prey handling sequence may be used widely by dolphins in the region. Aspects of the unique mass spawning aggregations of giant cuttlefish in this region of South Australia may have contributed to the evolution of this behaviour through both high abundances of spawning and weakened post-spawning cuttlefish in a small area (>10,000 animals on several kilometres of narrow rocky reef), as well as potential long-term and regular visitation by dolphin pods to this site.
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spelling doaj.art-be544d6bbfd94c2ea00e8624b2d7a93f2022-12-21T18:11:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-01-0141e421710.1371/journal.pone.0004217Preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal: complex prey handling by dolphins.Julian FinnTom TregenzaMark NormanDolphins are well known for their complex social and foraging behaviours. Direct underwater observations of wild dolphin feeding behaviour however are rare. At mass spawning aggregations of giant cuttlefish (Sepia apama) in the Upper Spencer Gulf in South Australia, a wild female Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus) was observed and recorded repeatedly catching, killing and preparing cuttlefish for consumption using a specific and ordered sequence of behaviours. Cuttlefish were herded to a sand substrate, pinned to the seafloor, killed by downward thrust, raised mid-water and beaten by the dolphin with its snout until the ink was released and drained. The deceased cuttlefish was then returned to the seafloor, inverted and forced along the sand substrate in order to strip the thin dorsal layer of skin off the mantle, thus releasing the buoyant calcareous cuttlebone. This stepped behavioural sequence significantly improves prey quality through 1) removal of the ink (with constituent melanin and tyrosine), and 2) the calcareous cuttlebone. Observations of foraging dolphin pods from above-water at this site (including the surfacing of intact clean cuttlebones) suggest that some or all of this prey handling sequence may be used widely by dolphins in the region. Aspects of the unique mass spawning aggregations of giant cuttlefish in this region of South Australia may have contributed to the evolution of this behaviour through both high abundances of spawning and weakened post-spawning cuttlefish in a small area (>10,000 animals on several kilometres of narrow rocky reef), as well as potential long-term and regular visitation by dolphin pods to this site.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2626284?pdf=render
spellingShingle Julian Finn
Tom Tregenza
Mark Norman
Preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal: complex prey handling by dolphins.
PLoS ONE
title Preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal: complex prey handling by dolphins.
title_full Preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal: complex prey handling by dolphins.
title_fullStr Preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal: complex prey handling by dolphins.
title_full_unstemmed Preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal: complex prey handling by dolphins.
title_short Preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal: complex prey handling by dolphins.
title_sort preparing the perfect cuttlefish meal complex prey handling by dolphins
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2626284?pdf=render
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