Dear Colleagues, 

We are pleased to share a new publication in Frontiers in Marine Science 
entitled:

Barratclough, A., McFee, W. E., Stolen, M., Hohn, A., Lovewell, G., Gomez, F. 
M., Smith CR, Garcia-Parraga D., Wells, R., Parry C., Daniels., Ridgway, S., & 
Schwacke, L. How to estimate age of old bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops 
truncatus); by tooth or pectoral flipper?. Frontiers in Marine Science, 10, 364.

Abstract: Multiple techniques have been used for estimating age in bottlenose 
dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). The longest established technique is via counts 
of growth later groups (GLGs) in the longitudinal section of an extracted 
mandibular tooth. Previous studies to validate GLGs have primarily used younger 
dolphins (less than 16yrs old) due to the limited number of known age older 
animals. This study assessed the accuracy of age estimates for bottlenose 
dolphins using both GLG analysis and a newer technique, pectoral flipper 
radiography (PFR) for dolphins ranging from 0 to 58yrs, with a majority of 
samples (70%) over 16yrs. GLGs were assessed by two expert independent readers 
on tooth sections from 52 different dolphins (85% over 16yrs, maximum age 
58yrs), and assessments of PFRs were performed by two experienced veterinarians 
on 37 dolphins (54% over 16yrs, maximum age 54yrs). Results demonstrated both 
techniques became less accurate in older dolphins, particularly those > 30yrs, 
with errors as large as 37yrs for GLG estimates. The root mean squared error 
(RMSE) for age estimation using GLGs for dolphins ≤15 years of age was 1.46yrs 
compared to 1.58yrs using PFRs demonstrating the accuracy of both techniques in 
this age bracket. For dolphins >30yrs, RMSE increased to 17yrs in GLG aging and 
8.25yrs in PFR. Challenges in obtaining accurate age estimates in GLGs were 
primarily due to sectioning and staining difficulties in visualizing the newest 
GLG layers, in the very old animals. Complications in reading the layers 
included obtaining a good section, the presence of accessory layers, GLG 
compression, and tooth curvature or wear removing the neonatal line influencing 
aging biases. In pectoral flipper aging, the primary challenge was obtaining a 
true dorsoventral radiograph in a live dolphin during a health assessment, as 
well as the subjective assessment of scoring and reliance on degenerative 
changes accurately estimate age in geriatric dolphins. While access to the 
radiography equipment can be a limiting factor, the improved accuracy for age 
estimation in adult dolphins, the less invasive nature, and reduced processing 
time to results make pectoral radiography a preferred alternative technique for 
estimating age in live dolphins.

This article is available online open access thanks to the Jeanette Fuller 
Ridgway Scientific Writing Fund:

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2023.1135521/full 
<https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2023.1135521/full>

Please feel free to contact me at ashley.barratclo...@nmmf.org 
<mailto:ashley.barratclo...@nmmf.org> for a copy of the PDF or if you have any 
questions. 

Cheers, 

Ashley Barratclough 
BVetMed MSc WAH MS MRCVS
Conservation Medicine Veterinarian
National Marine Mammal Foundation 
San Diego 


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