Social Structure of Pods' Correlation to Frequency of Repetitive Pacing in Captive Beluga Whales

Authors

  • Gianna Perugini J.W. Mitchell High School
  • Jamela Orrego Mentor, J.W. Mitchell High School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47611/jsrhs.v10i3.2010

Keywords:

Beluga whales, Cetaceans, Odontoceti, Stereotypical Behavior, Repetitive Pacing, Social Structure, Behavior, Pod Diversity

Abstract

Beluga whales in captivity currently show signs of mental distress through stereotypical behaviors such as repetitive pacing. It is currently well established that the social structure of beluga whale pods can alter beluga whale social behavior. This study aims to determine how differing social structures of beluga whale pods correlate to the frequency of repetitive pacing. In this context repetitive pacing is when a beluga whale paces three or more laps in the same pattern and direction.

To test the hypothesis that beluga whales in larger more diverse pods will repetitively pace less than beluga whales in smaller more uniform pods, a behavioral observation was conducted at Seaworld Orlando and Georgia Aquarium. Over 20 observation periods, the amount of times repetitively paced, amount of laps while repetitively pacing, and the amount of laps repetitively paced per hour were all noted. The results supported the hypothesis, correlating the more diverse pod to less frequent repetitive pacing.

These results suggest that pod social structure can play a role in captive beluga whales’ mental wellbeing. On this basis, during future transfers, more diverse pods should be put together to try to limit the amount of repetitive pacing and improve the mental wellbeing of captive beluga whales.

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References or Bibliography

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Published

12-22-2021

How to Cite

Perugini, G., & Orrego, J. (2021). Social Structure of Pods’ Correlation to Frequency of Repetitive Pacing in Captive Beluga Whales. Journal of Student Research, 10(4). https://doi.org/10.47611/jsrhs.v10i3.2010

Issue

Section

AP Capstone™ Research