Abstract

AbstractAtlantic white‐sided dolphins (Lagenorhynchus acutus) are highly social odontocetes with a poorly understood tendency to mass strand. With limited capacity to study social ecology in the open ocean, mass strandings provide an opportunity to improve our understanding of group structure. Our study of 32 mass stranding events that occurred on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, between 1999 and 2009 identifies aspects of social ecology that vary across the year. A greater number of mass stranding events occurred outside of the breeding season and there was evidence of age‐structuring during the breeding season. We find generally low average intragroup pairwise relatedness assessed across eight microsatellite loci in a subset of 16 mass stranding events. Mass stranded groups do not show higher than expected relatedness when compared to a baseline estimate derived from single‐stranded individuals. Overall, our integration of genetic estimates of relatedness with data on sex and maturity‐class from stranded specimens suggests that Atlantic white‐sided dolphins fall near the more fluid end of the continuum from short‐term, highly fluid social associations to long‐term, stable groups represented among the odontocetes. Despite their tendency to mass strand, stable, kin‐based associations are not a defining feature of social group structure in this species.

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