Hello all,

On behalf of my fellow coauthors and myself, we are excited to share a new
publication titled "Human influence on bottlenose dolphin (*Tursiops
truncatus*) strandings in the northern Gulf of Mexico" published in
Frontiers in Environmental Science.

Carmichael RH, Hodanbosi MR, Russell ML and Wingers NL (2022), Human
influence on bottlenose dolphin (*Tursiops truncatus*) strandings in the
northern Gulf of Mexico. Front. Environ. Sci. 10:951329. doi:
10.3389/fenvs.2022.951329

Abstract: Human activity affects marine mammal stranding rates in two major
ways; through human interaction (HI) that may lead to mortality and through
search and response efforts that enable carcass detection. To better
quantify the combined effects of these interacting human influences, we
analyzed strandings for bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in the
northern Gulf of Mexico (nGOM), an area of high cetacean strandings. To
identify hotspots of human influence, we first determined the number of
total and HI-related bottlenose dolphin strandings normalized to shoreline
length in each nGOM U.S. state, which represent major response areas. To
estimate the effects of response effort on stranding numbers (for HI and
non-HI strandings), we used the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (DWHOS) as an
established benchmark to compare periods of lower (pre-spill) and higher
(post-spill) response effort. Strandings in Alabama waters were used as a
case study to detail spatial and temporal variation due to human influences
during the 39-year period of retrospective study. We found an increase in
strandings from Louisiana through Alabama following the DWHOS. Non-oil
related HI strandings increased in total number in AL, and they increased
as a proportion of total strandings in Alabama (16%) and the Florida
panhandle (12%). The increase in HI related strandings in Alabama was
driven by mortality of many types, but particularly fishery interactions
and cases of apparent intentional harm. The Alabama case study clearly
detected lower stranding numbers during periods of low or intermittent
response coverage. Our findings are consistent with an overall increase in
stranding numbers due to a combination of increased stranding occurrence
and response effort following the DWHOS. Importantly, we provide evidence
that HI-related standings increased independently from the DWHOS, with
ongoing increases in at least one hotspot (Alabama). These findings provide
a first step to parsing out different effects of human influences on
stranding data for a common coastal cetacean. Our approach establishes
baselines for future damage and recovery assessments, identifies areas
where resources can be focused for management and education, and highlights
the power of response and monitoring agencies to positively influence
stranding datasets.

This article is available OPEN ACCESS here:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2022.951329/full

Many thanks,
Mackenzie Russell

Mackenzie Russell, MS
Alabama Marine Mammal Stranding Network
Stranding Coordinator
Dauphin Island Sea Lab
mruss...@disl.org
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