Connor R C, Heithaus M R, Barre L M
Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, 02747, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2001 Feb 7;268(1464):263-7. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2000.1357.
Large brain size in mammals has been related to the number and complexity of social relationships, particularly social alliances within groups. The largest within-group male alliance known outside of humans is found in a social network (> 400) of Indian Ocean bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) in Shark Bay Western Australia. Members of this dolphin 'super-alliance' cooperate against other alliances over access to females. Males within the super-alliance form temporary trios and occasionally pairs in order to consort with individual females. The frequent switching of alliance partners suggests that social relationships among males within the super-alliance might be relatively simple and based on an equivalence rule', thereby allowing dolphins to form large alliances without taxing their 'social intelligence'. The equivalence model predicts that the 14 males in the super-alliance should not exhibit differences in alliance stability or partner preferences. However, data from 100 consortships do not support the equivalence hypothesis. The 14 males exhibited striking differences in alliance stability and partner preferences suggesting that the super-alliance has a complex internal structure. Further, within the super-alliance, alliance stability correlates with consortship rate, suggesting that differentiated relationships within the super-alliance are based on competition for access to females.
哺乳动物的大脑尺寸较大与社会关系的数量和复杂性有关,尤其是群体内部的社会联盟。在人类以外已知的最大的群体内部雄性联盟存在于西澳大利亚鲨鱼湾的印度洋宽吻海豚(Tursiops aduncus)的一个社会网络(超过400只)中。这个海豚“超级联盟”的成员在获取雌性方面会联合起来对抗其他联盟。超级联盟中的雄性会组成临时三人组,偶尔也会组成两人组以便与个别雌性交配。联盟伙伴的频繁更换表明,超级联盟中雄性之间的社会关系可能相对简单,基于“等价规则”,从而使海豚能够形成大型联盟而不消耗其“社会智力”。等价模型预测,超级联盟中的14只雄性在联盟稳定性或伙伴偏好上不应表现出差异。然而,来自100次交配的数据并不支持等价假设。这14只雄性在联盟稳定性和伙伴偏好上表现出显著差异,表明超级联盟具有复杂的内部结构。此外,在超级联盟内部,联盟稳定性与交配率相关,这表明超级联盟内部不同的关系是基于对获取雌性的竞争。