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Strategic intergroup alliances increase access to a contested resource in male bottlenose dolphins

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Significance Cooperation between allied individuals is ubiquitous in human societies. Our capacity to build strategic cooperative relationships across multiple social levels, such as trade or military alliances both nationally and… Click to show full abstract

Significance Cooperation between allied individuals is ubiquitous in human societies. Our capacity to build strategic cooperative relationships across multiple social levels, such as trade or military alliances both nationally and internationally, is thought to be unique to our species. Here, however, we show that male bottlenose dolphins form the largest known multilevel alliance network outside humans, where the cooperative relationships between groups, rather than alliance size, increases male access to a contested resource. These results reveal that both dolphins and humans form strategic intergroup alliances between unrelated individuals, likely selecting for enhanced social cognition. This surprising case of convergence suggests that dolphin societies, as well as those of nonhuman primates, are valuable model systems for understanding human social and cognitive evolution.

Keywords: contested resource; strategic intergroup; access contested; intergroup alliances; male bottlenose; bottlenose dolphins

Journal Title: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Year Published: 2022

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