Hello, 

We are pleased to announce the publication of the following paper in Marine 
Mammal Science. 

Mallette, S. D., McLellan, W. A., Scharf, F. S., Koopman, H. N., Barco, S. G., 
Wells, R. S. and Ann Pabst, D. (2016), Ontogenetic allometry and body 
composition of the common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) from the U.S. 
mid-Atlantic. Marine Mammal Science, 32: 86–121. doi: 10.1111/mms.12253


ABSTRACT: Growth in common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) was 
investigated through examination of sex-specific, ontogenetic changes in the 
mass of 38 discrete body compartments, utilizing stranded dolphins in good body 
condition (n = 145). Ontogenetic allometry and the body composition technique 
were used to quantitatively describe growth patterns. Although adult males were 
significantly larger than adult females in total body mass (TBM) and total 
length, overall patterns of growth were remarkably similar between sexes. The 
integument, locomotor muscle, and vertebral column together represented 50%–58% 
of TBM across all life history categories, although their relative 
contributions varied ontogenetically. Young dolphins invested the greatest 
percentage of TBM in integument, while locomotor muscle was the single largest 
body component in adults. In both sexes (1) most muscle groups displayed 
positive allometry, (2) most skeletal elements displayed negative allometric or 
isometric growth, (3) most abdominal viscera associated with digestion 
displayed positive allometry, and (4) the brain displayed negative allometric 
growth. Reproductive tissues exhibited the highest rates of growth in both 
sexes, and increased as a percentage of TBM with maturity. This study provides 
an integrated view of bottlenose dolphin growth and a quantitative baseline of 
body composition for future monitoring of this sentinel species of ecosystem 
health. 

This publication is available online:  
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mms.12253/abstract 


Please contact me by email and I will be happy to send you a copy:  
[email protected] 


Best, 

Sarah Mallette

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