Greetings MARMAM,

I am pleased to announce the publication of our newest article about the 
demographic dynamics of the Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins in the Beibu Gulf, 
northern South China Sea in *Frontiers in Marine Science.

*Lin W, Zheng R, Liu B, Chen S, Lin M, Liu M, Liu W, Li S. Low Survivals and 
Rapid Demographic Decline of a Threatened Estuarine Delphinid. Frontiers in 
Marine Science, 2022, 9.*

Abstract:
Beibu Gulf’s (BBG) Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins present both a genetic 
differentiation and phenotypical differences from conspecifics from other areas 
of the South China Sea. Given the recent urbanization and industrialization in 
southern China, humpback dolphins from the BBG warrant conservation attention. 
However, this population’s demographic trend is unclear, making it hard to take 
conservation measures. To assess the population status of humpback dolphins in 
the BBG, photo-identification surveys were conducted between 2015 and 2019 in 
the inshore region surrounding the Dafeng River Estuary, which represents the 
most urbanized and industrialized coastal area of the BBG region. Robust design 
modeling suggested a constant survival for the female adults (0.89, 95% CI: 
0.83�C0.94). In comparison, the survival of the juvenile and sex-undetermined 
adults dropped from 0.92 (95% CI: 0.75�C0.98) in 2015 to 0.86 (95% CI: 
0.71�C0.94) in 2016 and bounced back to 0.89 (95% CI: 0.80�C0.94) in 2018. The 
low level of survival may justify the rapid decline in the annual population 
size from 156 (95% CI: 133�C184) in 2015 to 102 (95% CI: 98�C107) in 2019. We 
found little impact of emigration on the dolphin demographic process. Instead, 
the low and fluctuating survivals, although with overlapping confidence 
intervals, seemingly suggested a presence of strong marine stressor(s). Our 
study highlighted that obtaining high-resolution data is essential to improving 
our understanding of the demographic dynamics. Moreover, the anthropogenic 
stress in the BBG region should be quantitatively studied in both temporal and 
spatial perspectives, to help depict the ecological response of the dolphins to 
anthropogenic activities.

The full article is available on Frontiers | Low Survivals and Rapid 
Demographic Decline of a Threatened Estuarine Delphinid | Marine Science 
(frontiersin.org) .

Best regards,

Wenzhi Lin
Research Associate
Institute of Deep-sea Science and Engineering, Chinese Academy of Science


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