A field study of chemical senses in bottlenose dolphins and pilot whales

Archive ouverte

Bouchard, Bertrand | Barnagaud, Jean-Yves | Verborgh, Philippe | Gauffier, Pauline | Campagna, Sylvie | Célérier, Aurélie

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley-Blackwell -

International audience. For most marine vertebrates, chemical cues provide crucial information during navigation and foraging, but their use by cetaceans is still poorly understood. In contrast to baleen whales, toothed whales (odontocetes) are scarcely equipped for chemoreception: they lack the conventional anatomical structures ( i.e ., olfactory epithelium, nerves and bulbs) involved in olfaction and have reduced taste buds on the tongue. Several behavioral studies have however shown that captive dolphins can perceive chemical solutions, including odorants, in their oral cavity. To investigate whether odontocetes could use infochemicals in their foraging ecology, we implemented a behavioral response experiment in wild bottlenose dolphins and long‐finned pilot whales. We tested dimethyl sulfide (DMS) as a potentially attractive stimulus since it is a chemical signature of highly productive marine areas, known to attract several marine predators including fishes and seabirds. We assessed cetacean responses to DMS exposure by analyzing their movements and surface behaviors recorded by onboard observers. In both species, results did not reveal any significant attraction or behavioral reaction toward DMS when compared to a control chemical stimulus, apart from a short‐distance response in bottlenose dolphins. These results suggest that while odontocetes may perceive DMS in water, it apparently does not play a significant role in their foraging ecology. Testing potentially more attractive compounds such as prey extracts with the present method and analyzing surface, underwater and acoustic responses would provide further insights on odontocete feeding behavior. It would also provide valuable clues to studies on the anatomical structures involved in their chemosenses.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Behavioural responses of humpback whales to food-related chemical stimuli

Archive ouverte | Bouchard, Bertrand | CCSD

International audience. Baleen whales face the challenge of finding patchily distributed food in the open ocean. Their relatively well-developed olfactory structures suggest that they could identify the specific odo...

Do bottlenose dolphins display behavioural response to fish taste?

Archive ouverte | Bouchard, Bertrand | CCSD

International audience. The chemosensory abilities (i.e. taste, smell and trigeminal perception) of odontocete cetaceans are still widelyunknown. However, a better understanding of their potential use of these sense...

Food stimulation in Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus ) activates the autonomic nervous system, causing heart rate reduction

Archive ouverte | Torrente, Angelo | CCSD

Mare Camp. International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...