Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to announce our new publication in the latest issue of Mammal 
Review:
Cheney, B., P. M. Thompson, S. N. Ingram, P. S. Hammond, P. T. Stevick, J. W. 
Durban, R. M. Culloch, S. H. Elwen, L. Mandleberg, V. M. Janik, N. J. Quick, V. 
Islas-Villanueva, K. P. Robinson, M. Costa, S. M. Eisfeld, A. Walters, C. 
Phillips, C. R. Weir, P. G. H. Evans, P. Anderwald, R. J. Reid, J. B. Reid and 
B. Wilson. 2013. Integrating multiple data sources to assess the distribution 
and abundance of bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus in Scottish waters. 
Mammal Review 43: 71-88.

Abstract

1.       The distribution, movements and abundance of highly mobile marine 
species such as bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus are best studied at 
large spatial scales, but previous research effort has generally been focused 
on relatively small areas, occupied by populations with high site fidelity.

2.       We aimed to characterize the distribution, movements and abundance of 
bottlenose dolphins around the coasts of Scotland, exploring how data from 
multiple sources could be integrated to build a broader-scale picture of their 
ecology.

3.       We reviewed existing historical data, integrated data from ongoing 
studies and developed new collaborative studies to describe distribution 
patterns. We adopted a Bayesian multi-site mark-recapture model to estimate 
abundance of bottlenose dolphins throughout Scottish coastal waters and 
quantified movements of individuals between study areas.

4.       The majority of sightings of bottlenose dolphins around the Scottish 
coastline are concentrated on the east and west coasts, but records are rare 
before the 1990s. Dedicated photo-identification studies in 2006 and 2007 were 
used to estimate the size of two resident populations: one on the east coast 
from the Moray Firth to Fife, population estimate 195 [95% highest posterior 
density intervals (HPDI): 162-253] and the second in the Hebrides, population 
estimate 45 (95% HPDI: 33-66). Interaction parameters demonstrated that the 
dolphins off the east coast of Scotland are highly mobile, whereas those off 
the west coast form two discrete communities.

5.       We provide the first comprehensive assessment of the abundance of 
bottlenose dolphins in the inshore waters of Scotland. The combination of 
dedicated photo-identification studies and opportunistic sightings suggest that 
a relatively small number of bottlenose dolphins (200-300 individuals) occur 
regularly in Scottish coastal waters. On both east and west coasts, 
re-sightings of identifiable individuals indicate that the animals have been 
using these coastal areas since studies began.

A PDF is available from our website: 
http://www.abdn.ac.uk/lighthouse/publications/journal-articles/

Kind regards,

Barbara
__
Barbara Cheney
Research Fellow
Lighthouse Field Station
University of Aberdeen
George Street
Cromarty
Ross-shire IV11 8YL
Tel: 01381 600548
www.abdn.ac.uk/lighthouse<http://www.abdn.ac.uk/lighthouse>




The University of Aberdeen is a charity registered in Scotland, No SC013683.
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to