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Visual Laterality of Calf–Mother Interactions in Wild Whales. / Karenina, Karina; Giljov, Andrey; Baranov, Vladimir; Osipova, Ludmila; Krasnova, Vera; Malashichev, Yegor.

In: PLoS ONE, Vol. 5, No. 11, 2010, p. e13787.

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Karenina, Karina ; Giljov, Andrey ; Baranov, Vladimir ; Osipova, Ludmila ; Krasnova, Vera ; Malashichev, Yegor. / Visual Laterality of Calf–Mother Interactions in Wild Whales. In: PLoS ONE. 2010 ; Vol. 5, No. 11. pp. e13787.

BibTeX

@article{83b5d333fb94474fabd9c6df4735846e,
title = "Visual Laterality of Calf–Mother Interactions in Wild Whales",
abstract = "Background Behavioral laterality is known for a variety of vertebrate and invertebrate animals. Laterality in social interactions has been described for a wide range of species including humans. Although evidence and theoretical predictions indicate that in social species the degree of population level laterality is greater than in solitary ones, the origin of these unilateral biases is not fully understood. It is especially poorly studied in the wild animals. Little is known about the role, which laterality in social interactions plays in natural populations. A number of brain characteristics make cetaceans most suitable for investigation of lateralization in social contacts. Methodology/Principal Findings Observations were made on wild beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) in the greatest breeding aggregation in the White Sea. Here we show that young calves (in 29 individually identified and in over a hundred of individually not recognized mother-calf pairs) swim and rest significantly longer on a mother",
author = "Karina Karenina and Andrey Giljov and Vladimir Baranov and Ludmila Osipova and Vera Krasnova and Yegor Malashichev",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0013787.g001",
language = "не определен",
volume = "5",
pages = "e13787",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "11",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Visual Laterality of Calf–Mother Interactions in Wild Whales

AU - Karenina, Karina

AU - Giljov, Andrey

AU - Baranov, Vladimir

AU - Osipova, Ludmila

AU - Krasnova, Vera

AU - Malashichev, Yegor

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Background Behavioral laterality is known for a variety of vertebrate and invertebrate animals. Laterality in social interactions has been described for a wide range of species including humans. Although evidence and theoretical predictions indicate that in social species the degree of population level laterality is greater than in solitary ones, the origin of these unilateral biases is not fully understood. It is especially poorly studied in the wild animals. Little is known about the role, which laterality in social interactions plays in natural populations. A number of brain characteristics make cetaceans most suitable for investigation of lateralization in social contacts. Methodology/Principal Findings Observations were made on wild beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) in the greatest breeding aggregation in the White Sea. Here we show that young calves (in 29 individually identified and in over a hundred of individually not recognized mother-calf pairs) swim and rest significantly longer on a mother

AB - Background Behavioral laterality is known for a variety of vertebrate and invertebrate animals. Laterality in social interactions has been described for a wide range of species including humans. Although evidence and theoretical predictions indicate that in social species the degree of population level laterality is greater than in solitary ones, the origin of these unilateral biases is not fully understood. It is especially poorly studied in the wild animals. Little is known about the role, which laterality in social interactions plays in natural populations. A number of brain characteristics make cetaceans most suitable for investigation of lateralization in social contacts. Methodology/Principal Findings Observations were made on wild beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) in the greatest breeding aggregation in the White Sea. Here we show that young calves (in 29 individually identified and in over a hundred of individually not recognized mother-calf pairs) swim and rest significantly longer on a mother

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0013787.g001

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0013787.g001

M3 - статья

VL - 5

SP - e13787

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 11

ER -

ID: 5043634