Abstract

Simple SummaryEven though species differ in terms of personality traits and responses to external stimuli, welfare-oriented studies conducted on odontocetes are mostly focused on bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). Odontocetes are highly social animals; social behaviors are therefore interesting to investigate in relation to welfare. Video recording was conducted over a year on three groups of captive odontocetes, to record the frequency of social behaviors across different contexts. Captive odontocetes’ social behaviors, such as pectoral contacts, other body contacts, agonistic interactions or social play were influenced by the context and the patterns observed in this study suggest their potential usefulness to assess welfare in these animals, and that species and groups might react differently to a stimulus.Research on the welfare of captive odontocetes has increased in recent years, but has been mostly focused on bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). Few studies investigated potential welfare indicators using quantitative data linked to a range of conditions or stimuli that are thought to impact the animals’ emotional state. Since odontocetes are social animals that engage in various social interactions, these interactions might inform us on their welfare state. We investigated pectoral contact laterality and the effect of the context on several social behaviors in three groups of captive odontocetes (Yangtze finless porpoises, YFPs: Neophocaena asiaeorientalis asiaeorientalis; East-Asian finless porpoises, EAFPs: N. a. sunameri, and bottlenose dolphins, BDs). Animals exhibited patterns depending on the time of the day for most of the social behaviors we analyzed; social separation was associated with lower rates of social behaviors for the two analyzed groups (YFPs and BDs), the accessibility to several pools was associated with higher rates of social behaviors for BDs. The effect of enrichment, disturbances and public presence was less clear and strongly depended on the group, the type of enrichment and disturbance. Our results confirm that captive odontocetes’ social behaviors are influenced by the context, and that, depending on the group, some of them, such as pectoral contacts, other body contacts, agonistic interactions or social play exhibit consistent patterns across contexts. Monitoring these behaviors might be useful to adapt the captive management to each species and group. The different responses among the three studied groups confirm that species and groups react differently to a stimulus and therefore, management decisions should be species/group specific. We recommend that more studies should be conducted to validate our findings in other groups of odontocetes under human care.

Highlights

  • Research on the welfare of zoo animals has expanded in recent years [1]

  • EAFPs and BDs did not exhibit a significant preference for a pectoral fin

  • Body contacts were lower for YFPs but higher for EAFPs and BDs when disturbances occurred

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Summary

Introduction

Research on the welfare of zoo animals has expanded in recent years [1]. The standard definition of animal welfare usually includes the five needs, stating that animals should (1) be housed in a suitable environment; (2) be fed a suitable diet; (3) be free to express normal behaviors; (4) be housed with or apart from other animals; and (5) be protected from any pain, suffering, disease or injury [2]. Nowadays, a “feelings-based” definition of welfare is often adopted [3,4,5]. Welfare can be defined as a balance between positive and negative emotional states and positive experiences being linked with good welfare, whereas aversive experiences are linked with poor welfare [6]. Studies and reviews about captive odontocetes’ welfare pointed out the lack of reliable work on parameters that could be used to assess welfare: welfare indicators [7,8]

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