Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to announce our new publication in Animal Conservation:

Cheney, B., Wells, R.S., Barton, T.R. & Thompson, P.M., 2017. Laser 
photogrammetry reveals variation in growth and early survival in free-ranging 
bottlenose dolphins. Animal Conservation DOI: 10.1111/acv.12384

Abstract
Growth and body condition can be used as indices of health and fitness, but are 
difficult to collect for populations of conservation concern where individuals 
cannot be captured. We incorporated a laser photogrammetry system into 
boat-based photo-identification surveys that underpin individual-based studies 
of cetacean populations. These data were integrated with >25 years of 
observations from a temperate bottlenose dolphin population in Scotland to 
investigate the influence of sex on growth patterns, effects of birth order on 
calf size and the longer term consequences of variation in early growth. Field 
measurements of the distance from the blowhole to the  dorsal fin were made in 
multiple years from 87 dolphins that had been followed from birth, ranging in 
age from newborn to 26 years. These estimates were validated against direct 
measurements of 12 individuals that had previously been captured and released 
in Florida and two study individuals that subsequently stranded. Using 
relationships derived from other stranded individuals, age-specific body 
lengths were used to produce growth curves that were based entirely on remote 
observations. Multilevel regression growth curve analyses suggested males and 
females showed similar patterns of growth, unlike bottlenose dolphins in 
sub-tropical areas, and growth was best described by a Richards' growth curve. 
Newborn length was unrelated to sex; however, females' first calves were 
shorter than subsequent calves. Sample sizes remain small, yet there was 
evidence of fitness consequences of variation in calf length; calves that died 
in their first winter were significantly shorter than those that survived. The 
incorporation of this simple-to-use and inexpensive method into 
individual-based photo-identification studies provides new opportunities to 
non-invasively investigate drivers of variation in growth and the demographic 
consequences of variation in early growth in cetaceans from protected 
populations.

Our article is published online for early view and open access at 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acv.12384/full

Kind regards,

Barbara

__
Barbara Cheney
Research Fellow
Lighthouse Field Station
University of Aberdeen
George Street
Cromarty
Ross-shire IV11 8YL
Tel: 01381 600548

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