Dear all,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the following publication in 
Canadian Journal of Zoology:



Taxonomy and distribution of bottlenose dolphins (genus Tursiops) in Australian 
waters: an osteological clarification.

Abstract: Species relationships in the bottlenose dolphin (genus Tursiops 
Gervais, 1855) are controversial. We carried out a comprehensive osteological 
study of 264 skulls, including type specimens, and 90 postcranial skeletons of 
Tursiops spp. to address taxonomic uncertainties in Australia using 
two-dimensional (2D) measurements, and three-dimensional geometric 
morphometrics (3DGM), tooth and vertebral counts, and categorical data. 
Analyses provided support for the presence of two forms, aligned to the 
Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus (Ehrenberg, 1832)) and the 
common bottlenose dolphin

(Tursiops truncatus (Montagu, 1821)), including type specimens. The Burrunan 
dolphin (Tursiops australis Charlton-Robb, Gershwin, Thompson, Austin, Owen and 
McKechnie, 2011) fell well within T. truncatus for both 2D and 3DGM methods. 
Thirteen Tursiops spp. specimens, no T. australis specimens, were of 
intermediate size (2D) and could not be assigned to either species. For 3DGM 
data, there was a strong allometric influence and few non-allometric 
differences between species. Length and width of the cranium and rostrum were 
important discriminating variables. Tursiops aduncus was smaller, had more 
teeth, fewer vertebrae, and more erosion on the pterygoids and frontals than T. 
truncatus. Overall cranium shape was round in T. aduncus and angular in T. 
truncatus. Skull length of T. aduncus was smaller in low than in high 
latitudes. This study highlights the importance of large sample size, multiple 
analytical methods, and extensive geographical coverage when undertaking 
taxonomic studies.

The full citation is:

Jedensjö, M., Kemper, C.M., Milella, M., Willems, E. and Krutzen, M., 2020. 
Taxonomy and distribution of bottlenose dolphins (genus Tursiops) in Australian 
waters: an osteological clarification. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 98: 461–479.



A full copy of the manuscript can be downloaded from 
https://www.nrcresearchpress.com/doi/abs/10.1139/cjz-2018-0270, or a pdf can be 
emailed upon request from Maria 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>).

Kind regards,
Maria Jedensjö (on behaf of all co-authors)



University of Zürich, Switzerland

South Australian Museum, Adelaide



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