Bottlenose dolphins may be killing their sibling species over food shortages
September 4th, 2008 - 4:01 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, September 4 (ANI): Scientists have warned that Bottlenose dolphins suffering from food shortages may be killing their sibling species to take out the competition.
According to a report in the Telegraph, the appearance of the body of a rare baby Rissos dolphin on a beach in the Scilly Isles has raised fears that bottlenose dolphins may be becoming more aggressive in its desperate search for food.
The latest victim, which washed up in St Agnes, was young enough to still be dependent on its mother for nourishment and researchers believe it was killed by an adult predator.
Rissos dolphins have tall dorsal fins, extensively scarred, almost stripy black bodies and blunt heads. They are often seen around Cornwall although not as frequently as bottlenose and common dolphins.
It is the first time one has been linked with a fatal attack by bottlenoses.
The baby dolphin has been brought back to the mainland where it will undergo a post-mortem examination.
Despite their friendly image, bottlenose dolphins can be aggressive towards one another and on the rare occasion that we see a dead bottlenose wash ashore, it often has rake or tooth marks inflicted by its own species, said Jan Loveridge, volunteer co-ordinator for Cornwall Wildlife Trust’’s Marine Strandings Network.
But, we have recently begun to see an increase in the numbers of young and female harbour porpoise that have clearly been attacked by bottlenose dolphins and results from the post mortems carried out on these animals confirm this, she added.
According to Loveridge, the discovery of yet another species that has suffered from these attacks is of particular interest especially as it was so young.
The motives for such attacks are unclear, although scientists have considered that competition for declining food stocks may trigger the behaviour, she added. (ANI)
- Scientists discover two dolphin species using 'common language' - Oct 01, 2010
- Porpoise deaths due to dolphin attacks - Nov 10, 2009
- Rare footage of dolphins teaching calf recorded - Nov 02, 2010
- Dolphins, marine mammals hunted for human consumption - Jan 25, 2012
- Match-making male dolphins more successful in mating - Oct 27, 2011
- Call goes out to save the Ganges Dolphin - Feb 24, 2010
- Dolphins can imitate other dolphins blindfolded - Jan 21, 2011
- 17 dead baby dolphins found on Gulf beaches - Feb 23, 2011
- Drought threatens rare dolphin breed in China - May 27, 2011
- British hospitals ban caesareans in cost-cutting move - Aug 21, 2011
- BP Oil Spill: Dead dolphins washed ashore had oil on them - Apr 08, 2011
- Pesticides poisoning Ganges river dolphins - Mar 31, 2010
- Do blindfolded dolphins use 'sixth sense' to imitate each other? - Jan 21, 2011
- Scientists capture extraordinary footage of giant deep sea fish - Feb 09, 2010
- How ancient species adapted to life in open oceans - Sep 17, 2009
Tags: baby dolphin, bottlenose dolphins, co ordinator, common dolphins, cornwall wildlife trust, dorsal fins, food stocks, harbour porpoise, scilly isles, sibling species