| 1. |
Most male and female river otters form separate dominance hierarchies. The highest ranking males occupy the most favorable ranges. Males and females normally tolerate - but do not accompany - each other. A female with young may become dominant to males.
|
| 2. |
In Southeast Asia, smooth otters typically occur in social groups consisting of an adult male-female pair and their young. |
| 3. |
Spot-necked otters have been observed in groups of more than 6, and as many as 20, animals. On Lake Victoria in East Africa, spot-necked otters may undergo a cycle of aggregation and dispersal, with males and females forming separate groups. A female group may contain 8 to 20 individuals, but become smaller during mating when females pair off with males. |
| 4. |
A giant otter social group consists of an adult pair, one or more subadults, and one or more juveniles. Groups with as many as 20 individuals have been reported, but groups of 4 to 8 are more common. Giant otters exhibit a high degree of pair bonding and group cohesiveness. |
| 5. |
Cape clawless otters have a clan-type social organization, with groups of related animals associating with one another and defending joint territories. Males may maintain a loose association with a female and her young. |
| 6. |
Asian small-clawed otters live in loose family groups of about 12 animals. |
| |
| |
|
| Asian small-clawed otters live in loose family groups. |
|
| |
|
| 7. |
Sea otters are basically solitary, but in Alaska they aggregate in large groups of as many as 2,000 animals. Males and females occupy separate sections of coastline, and only come together briefly for mating. |