Dear MARMAM subscribers,
 
My co-authors and I are pleased to bring to your attention the following 
publication on Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins, Sousa chinensis, in Australian 
waters (abstract below):
 
Brown, A., Bejder, L., Cagnazzi, D., Parra, G. and Allen, S. 2012. The North 
West Cape, Western Australia: A Potential Hotspot for Indo-Pacific Humpback 
Dolphins Sousa chinensis? Pacific Conservation Biology 18: 240-246.
 
It's not rocket science, but it is the first publication specific to Sousa 
chinensis in Western Australian waters. This paper follows on from our more 
general publication of early 2012 (Allen et al. 2012. Tropical inshore dolphins 
of north-western Australia: Unknown populations in a rapidly changing region. 
Pac Cons Biol 18: 56-63). 

PDF copies are available through Pacific Conservation Biology 
(http://pcb.murdoch.edu.au/pcb_online.html), or by request to 
[email protected]. 
 

For further info, see 
http://mucru.org/latest-news/new-publication-on-indo-pacific-humpback-dolphins-in-western-australia/.
 


Regards,
 
Alex
 
Abstract:
Indo-Pacific Humpback Dolphins Sousa chinensis (Humpback Dolphins hereafter) 
are listed as 'near threatened' on an international level and 'migratory' in 
Australian waters. There is limited information on Humpback Dolphins in Western 
Australian State waters, where the species remains unlisted. This lack of 
knowledge hinders the management and conservation of the species in a region of 
rapidly increasing coastal development. We conducted opportunistic boat-based 
surveys in April 2010 and present data on the location, size and composition of 
Humpback Dolphin groups encountered in the near-shore waters around the North 
West Cape, Western Australia. A total of 42 groups were encountered in a 
variety of habitats during 145 h on the water over ca. 80 km coastline. Group 
size ranged from 1 to 15, with a mean (± SE) of 5.3 (± 0.48) individuals. A 
total of 54 Humpback Dolphins were identified from photographs of the unique 
markings on their dorsal fins. The lack of a plateau in the cumulative 
discovery curve of identified individuals over the duration of the study 
suggests that only a subset of dolphins in the area was identified. This region 
is close to the south-western limit of the species' Australian distribution and 
appears to represent an important location for Western Australian Humpback 
Dolphins. In light of increasing anthropogenic activity around the North West 
Cape and Exmouth Gulf, these preliminary findings from a limited survey effort 
indicate that further research into this population is required.
 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Alex Brown
Cetacean Research Unit (MUCRU)
Centre for Fish, Fisheries and Aquatic Ecosystem Research
Murdoch University, South Street, Murdoch, WA 6150, Australia
( Tel +61 (0)89360 6520 |( Mob +61 (0)487399861| * [email protected]
 
 
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