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Social laterality in wild beluga whale infants: comparisons between locations, escort conditions, and ages
Authors:Karina Karenina  Andrey Giljov  Dmitry Glazov  Yegor Malashichev
Institution:1. Department of Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology and Soil Sciences, Saint Petersburg State University, Universitetskaya nab., 7/9, St. Petersburg, 199034, Russia
2. White Whale Program of Permanent expedition of Russian Academy of Science studying Red Book animals and other focus species of Russia of A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninskiy pr, 33, 119071, Moscow, Russia
3. Department of Embryology, Faculty of Biology and Soil Sciences, Saint Petersburg State University, 7/9 Universitetskaya nab., St. Petersburg, 199034, Russia
Abstract:One of the important aspects of the animal social behavior is the laterality in perception of conspecifics. Spatial laterality in adult–infant interactions is usually revealed in primates as a cradling/holding bias in adults or nipple preference in infants. The origin and function of such biases, however, remain unclear. Here, we investigated spatial laterality in adult–infant pairs in beluga whales from two geographically distinct locations using aerial photography analysis. In addition, behavioral observations on individually identified mother–infant pairs at a belugas’ breeding aggregation were conducted to assess the infants’ age influence on the lateralization in pairs. A general preference of the calves to position themselves to the right of the accompanied adult was found. We failed to reveal any influence of geographical location, presence or relative position of other individuals escorting the adult–infant pair, and position of the calf along the body of the escorting adult. A significant right-sided bias in infants’ position was present in all age classes, but 2–6 months-old belugas were found to be stronger lateralized, than the newborns and 7–18 months-old calves. That may reflect age-related changes in infants’ motor and social behavior. We argue that the revealed laterality is associated with the calves’ left eye–right hemisphere preference in perceiving social stimuli, and we then discuss its possible advantages. Pronounced adult–infant spatial laterality in condition (unlike that seen in primates) when forelimbs do not directly determine subjects’ relative positioning suggests sensory lateralization alone to be the determining factor.
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