G'day folks,

Have you heard of "alliances of alliances" in wild animals? What about 
"sponging", "shelling" or "kerplunking"? Do you know if dolphins possess 
material culture?

The Shark Bay Dolphin Research Alliance encompasses the Dolphin Alliance 
Project and the Dolphin Innovation Project, and we're very pleased to (somewhat 
belatedly) let you know that our new website is finally online: 
http://www.sharkbaydolphins.org<http://www.sharkbaydolphins.org/>

Here is an excerpt from the home page (our ‘abstract’ of sorts): The famous 
dolphins of Shark Bay, Western Australia, have been studied in great detail 
since the early 1980s. Over 30 years of scientific research into one of our 
planet’s most fascinating populations of wild animals has provided insight into 
their behaviour, genetics and ecology, including the daily challenges they face 
to find mates and food, and to avoid predators. Vast seagrass meadows in Shark 
Bay provide forage for turtles and dugongs, and nursery areas for fish; shallow 
sand flats and mangrove patches are home to countless invertebrates, rays and 
small sharks; deeper channels support sponge gardens and rocky reefs, providing 
habitat and hunting grounds for sea snakes, large sharks and, of course, 
dolphins. With this myriad of niches to exploit, but so much competition for 
food and mating opportunities, we find a population of dolphins with incredibly 
complex social lives and an intriguing repertoire of foraging specialisations, 
including tool use.

Please visit the site to see more, and continue to do so to stay abreast of our 
research.

Best regards, Simon Allen, Richard Connor and Michael Krützen

P.S. For the artists/design nerds, our logos embody the colours and the shapes 
of Shark Bay, dolphin behaviour, sponges, shells, the double helix, and a chart 
of our study sites in the two gulfs, as well as some important data points (for 
the eagle-eyed). This is all reflected in a way that pays homage to the 
original custodians of “Gutharraguda” (or “two bays”), the Malgana people. This 
deft design was by http://www.wolfdesignltd.co.uk/

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Simon Allen, PhD
Murdoch University Cetacean Research Unit
School of Veterinary and Life Sciences
Murdoch University
90 South St, Murdoch
Western Australia 6150

Mob: (61-0) 416 083 653
Email: 
[email protected]<applewebdata://006C211F-965E-4B11-879F-544A520C4A7B/[email protected]>
Web:  http://www.sharkbaydolphins.org<http://www.sharkbaydolphins.org/>

[cid:36CE4812-5407-4E19-BB7F-7DDBB4AEBBE9]

Latest paper: http://www.tandfonline.com/eprint/3kKaKmus6dBgUj28dfG4/full
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