Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am happy to announce our recent publication
in Aquatic Mammals, titled "Enhancing Interpretation of Cetacean Acoustic
Monitoring: Investigating Factors that Influence Vocalization Patterns of
Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphins in an Urbanized Estuary, Charleston Harbor,
South Carolina, USA."

The paper is available in open-access at
https://www.aquaticmammalsjournal.org/article/enhancing-interpretation-of-cetacean-acoustic-monitoring-investigating-factors-that-influence-vocalization-patterns-of-atlantic-bottlenose-dolphins-in-an-urbanized-estuary-charleston-harbor-south-c/

Tribble, C., Monczak, A., Transue, L., Marian, A., Fair, P., Balmer, B.,
Ballenger, J., Baker, H., Weinpress-Galipeau, M., Robertston, A., Strand,
A., & Montie, E. W. (2023). Enhancing Interpretation of Cetacean Acoustic
Monitoring: Investigating Factors that Influence Vocalization Patterns of
Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphins in an Urbanized Estuary, Charleston Harbor,
South Carolina, USA. *Aquat. Mamm*, *49*, 519-549.

Abstract:
The Charleston Harbor in South Carolina (SC) is a major port that
experiences high levels of vessel traffic. Historical analyses of coastal
bottlenose dolphin (*Tursiops truncatus*, now *Tursiops erebennus*)
sightings identified multiple core use areas in the harbor that overlap
with these anthropogenic activities. Informed by these long-term spatial
data, passive acoustic monitoring, visual surveys, and prey sampling were
conducted from December 2017 to June 2019 to assess the relationships and
multivariate interactions that may influence dolphin vocalization patterns.
Vocalizations varied spatially and temporally, peaking in fall and winter
months coinciding with decreases in water temperature and daylight hours,
following patterns previously reported in other SC estuaries. Dolphin prey
and total fish abundance decreased with water temperature, which may
indicate that dolphins echolocate and whistle more frequently in the winter
months when prey are scarce and sound producing species are less
soniferous. Dolphin sightings and vocalizations were highly correlated.
Dolphin occurrence was highest in the areas surrounding the confluence of
the Cooper and Wando Rivers, along the shipping channel, where vessel and
sound-producing fish detections were greatest. When vessel noise occurred,
dolphins increased their vocalizations, which suggests that this population
may be modifying its acoustic repertoire in response to increased noise
levels. Multivariate interactions indicate strong spatial and seasonal
patterns in vocalization rates that may be associated with dolphin and prey
abundance as well as noise-induced redundancy.

Best regards,
Caroline Tribble

-- 
Caroline Tribble
Faculty Research Assistant - Dolphin Specialist
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science
Chesapeake Biological Laboratory
[email protected]
+1(301) 938-0265
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