Dear  MARMAM Colleagues,
My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the publication of the following 
article in the Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United 
Kingdom:
Social structure of a population of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in 
the oceanic archipelago of Madeira, Portugal
Dinis, A., Alves, F., Nicolau, C., Ribeiro, C., Kaufmann, M., Cañadas, A., & 
Freitas, L. (2017). Social structure of a population of bottlenose dolphins 
(Tursiops truncatus) in the oceanic archipelago of Madeira, Portugal. Journal 
of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 1-9. 
doi:10.1017/S0025315417000650

In order to investigate social structure, 11 years of individual 
photo-identification data of bottlenose dolphin were analysed. We examined the 
type of association indices between pairs of identified individuals; the 
patterns of affiliation between individual dolphins and the probabilities of 
association between individuals over time. Between 2001 and 2012, there were 
272 encounters which resulted in the identification of 501 individuals. The 
discovery curve resulting from the photo-identification analysis indicated an 
open population with regular recruitment of new individuals. All individuals 
were found to be associated at an association index of <0.05. A total of 291 
individuals recorded from 2004 to 2012 were used to assess the temporal pattern 
of the social structure. The model fit to the Standardized Lagged Association 
Rate (SLAR) that best described the studied bottlenose dolphin population was 
‘casual acquaintances’, and the analysis of associations over time showed a 
decreasing SLAR curve that falls until reaching the null rate, confirming 
random associations. The decline of the SLAR curve after ~500 days (1.4 years) 
suggests disassociation over that time period which can be explained by 
demographic events such as mortality or emigration. In an open ocean habitat 
like Madeira this is not unexpected, as there are neither geographic boundaries 
nor enclosed environments. This population presented a dynamic and fluctuating 
social structure, where groups change in size and composition. In future 
conservation efforts this population should be considered as one large 
community, where individuals associate, disassociate and reassociate with each 
other over time.


Full text is available upon request to first author: ana.di...@ciimarmadeira.org
Kind regards,

Ana Dinis, PhD CIIMAR-Madeira,  ARDITI-OOM 
Phone:+351291721216http://home.ciimarmadeira.org/index.php?page=anadinis

   
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