Human disturbance drives rapid biodiversity loss, yet how prey diversity shapes individual niche differentiation and scales up to structure social organisation remains poorly understood, particularly in marine systems where prey are largely invisible to observation. Here we mapped prey community structure ('prey fields') using environmental DNA metabarcoding, integrating these maps with stable isotope data and >20 years of behavioural observations on bottlenose dolphins. We show that dolphins specialised on specific prey fields to varying degrees, and that none of 471 tracked individuals changed their predominant prey field; even through climate-driven habitat reorganisation. Isotope profiles confirmed dietary differentiation scaling with specialisation strength. Across four independent sex-subpopulation networks, prey field overlap predicted social affinity in non-foraging contexts, revealing that prey community structure organises social ties beyond foraging. These results expose a socio-ecological link between prey diversity, trophic ecology, and social organisation, providing a transferable eDNA framework for predators with elusive prey.
Bizzozzero, M. R., Peters, K. J., Marfurt, S. M., King, S. L., Willems, E. P., Cicciarella, R., Smith, F. M., Allen, S. J., Connor, R. C., Kruetzen, M.
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