Resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations

Individual resource specialisation is common in natural populations associated with competition and ecological opportunity (see Aroujo et al., 2011), and well known for the killer whale (where social groups specialise) and other delphinid cetaceans (see Hoelzel, 2002). Prey choice affects a predator...

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Main Authors: A. R. Hoelzel, Andre Moura
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Resource_specialisation_and_the_divergence_of_killer_whale_populations/24341497
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author A. R. Hoelzel
Andre Moura
author_facet A. R. Hoelzel
Andre Moura
author_sort A. R. Hoelzel
collection University of Lincoln: Research
description Individual resource specialisation is common in natural populations associated with competition and ecological opportunity (see Aroujo et al., 2011), and well known for the killer whale (where social groups specialise) and other delphinid cetaceans (see Hoelzel, 2002). Prey choice affects a predator’s temporal and spatial pattern of habitat use. For the killer whale, social groups (pods) learn where prey resources are seasonally abundant, and the techniques required to exploit different resources efficiently. Some fish prey, especially anadromous species such as salmon, may provide predictable seasonally rich concentrations, whereas marine mammal prey may be more patchily distributed and show a different pattern of temporal abundance (and accessibility). However, these resources are found within the same waters, though the timing and technique for capture may differ. Foote and Morin (2015) suggest that the co-occurrence of populations in the same ocean doesn't necessarily imply that they differentiated in sympatry, which is clearly true. However, as Moura et al. (2015) and others (for example, Hoelzel et al., 1998, 2007) have discussed, it is the life history and behaviour of killer whales that suggest the potential for differentiation in sympatry. Although the proximity of resources brings killer whale pods into sympatry, the differential pattern of spatial and temporal habitat use, as well as fidelity to pods that forage by similar learned methods, could serve to isolate resource specialist communities reproductively.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Killer Whale
Killer whale
genre_facet Killer Whale
Killer whale
geographic Foote
Moura
geographic_facet Foote
Moura
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institution Open Polar
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long_lat ENVELOPE(-66.175,-66.175,-66.197,-66.197)
ENVELOPE(28.483,28.483,66.450,66.450)
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spelling ftlincunivfig:oai:figshare.com:article/24341497 2025-01-16T22:53:36+00:00 Resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations A. R. Hoelzel Andre Moura 2015-05-20T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Resource_specialisation_and_the_divergence_of_killer_whale_populations/24341497 unknown 10779/lincoln.24341497.v2 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Resource_specialisation_and_the_divergence_of_killer_whale_populations/24341497 CC BY 4.0 C182 - Evolution JCOpen Killer whales Text Journal contribution 2015 ftlincunivfig 2024-10-08T04:39:07Z Individual resource specialisation is common in natural populations associated with competition and ecological opportunity (see Aroujo et al., 2011), and well known for the killer whale (where social groups specialise) and other delphinid cetaceans (see Hoelzel, 2002). Prey choice affects a predator’s temporal and spatial pattern of habitat use. For the killer whale, social groups (pods) learn where prey resources are seasonally abundant, and the techniques required to exploit different resources efficiently. Some fish prey, especially anadromous species such as salmon, may provide predictable seasonally rich concentrations, whereas marine mammal prey may be more patchily distributed and show a different pattern of temporal abundance (and accessibility). However, these resources are found within the same waters, though the timing and technique for capture may differ. Foote and Morin (2015) suggest that the co-occurrence of populations in the same ocean doesn't necessarily imply that they differentiated in sympatry, which is clearly true. However, as Moura et al. (2015) and others (for example, Hoelzel et al., 1998, 2007) have discussed, it is the life history and behaviour of killer whales that suggest the potential for differentiation in sympatry. Although the proximity of resources brings killer whale pods into sympatry, the differential pattern of spatial and temporal habitat use, as well as fidelity to pods that forage by similar learned methods, could serve to isolate resource specialist communities reproductively. Article in Journal/Newspaper Killer Whale Killer whale University of Lincoln: Research Foote ENVELOPE(-66.175,-66.175,-66.197,-66.197) Moura ENVELOPE(28.483,28.483,66.450,66.450)
spellingShingle C182 - Evolution
JCOpen
Killer whales
A. R. Hoelzel
Andre Moura
Resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations
title Resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations
title_full Resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations
title_fullStr Resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations
title_full_unstemmed Resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations
title_short Resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations
title_sort resource specialisation and the divergence of killer whale populations
topic C182 - Evolution
JCOpen
Killer whales
topic_facet C182 - Evolution
JCOpen
Killer whales
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Resource_specialisation_and_the_divergence_of_killer_whale_populations/24341497