“…Social communities composed by groups of related individuals, even in sympatry, differ in a variety of behavioral and morphological traits, which seems to be rooted on dietary specialization. By specializing on distinct prey—most famously mammals versus fish (Ford et al., )—killer whale social communities display distinct movement and hunting techniques more adjusted to their particular feeding habits and surrounding environment, along with distinct social systems and communication repertoires (e.g., Filatova et al., ; Yurk, Barrett‐Lennard, Ford, & Matkin, ). Finally, from their matrifocal social structures, foraging specializations seem to have triggered not only behavioral, but also genetic divergence (Foote et al., ; Hoelzel, Dahlheim, & Stern, ).…”