Abstract

Play is an important aspect of dolphin life, perhaps even an essential one. Play provides opportunities for dolphin calves to practice and perfect locomotor skills, including those involved in foraging and mating strategies and behaviors. Play also allows dolphin calves to learn important social skills and acquire information about the characteristics and predispositions of members of their social group, particularly their peers. In addition to helping dolphin calves learn how to behave, play also provides valuable opportunities for them to learn how to think. The ability to create and control play contexts enables dolphins to create novel experiences for themselves and their playmates under relatively safe conditions. The behavioral variability and individual creativity that characterize dolphin play yield ample opportunities for individual cognitive development as well as social learning, and sometimes result in innovations that are reproduced by other members of the group. Although adults sometimes produce innovative play, calves are the primary source of such innovations. Calves are also more likely to imitate novel play behaviors than are adults, and so calves contribute significantly to both the creation and transmission of novel play behaviors within a group. Not unexpectedly, then, the complexity of dolphin play increases with the involvement of peers. As a result, the opportunity to observe and/or interact with other dolphin calves enhances the effects of play on the acquisition and maintenance of flexible problem solving skills, the emergence and strengthening of social and communicative competencies, and the establishment of social relationships. It seems that play may have evolved to help young dolphins learn to adapt to novel situations in both their physical and social worlds, the beneficial result being a set of abilities that increases the likelihood that an individual survives and

Highlights

  • Play is notoriously difficult to define, regardless of the species that is playing (Burghardt, 2005; Kuczaj & Horback, 2013)

  • Play has been observed in many cetacean species, our focus in this paper will be on delphinid species, especially bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus)

  • Does the fact that young dolphins play more than older dolphins reflect developmental differences in the functions of play? Or do young dolphins have more time and/or energy to play? In this paper, we examine possible reasons for developmental differences in play among dolphins and for the prevalence of play in dolphins in general

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Summary

Why do Dolphins Play?

The opportunity to observe and/or interact with other dolphin calves enhances the effects of play on the acquisition and maintenance of flexible problem solving skills, the emergence and strengthening of social and communicative competencies, and the establishment of social relationships. It seems that play may have evolved to help young dolphins learn to adapt to novel situations in both their physical and social worlds, the beneficial result being a set of abilities that increases the likelihood that an individual survives and reproduces. It is necessary to consider both ontogeny and personality in explanations of dolphin play

What is dolphin play?
Seaweed sea star
Why do dolphins play?
The Significance of Play
Conclusions
Full Text
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