Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my co-authors I'm very pleased to share our new publication on 
Marine Mammal Science:

Escobar-Lazcano M., Morteo E., Delfín-Alfonso C.A., Islas-Villanueva V., 
Pérez-España H.,  Bello-Pineda J., 2025. Reproductive stage influences 
residency and site fidelity in female common bottlenose dolphins from the 
coastal waters off the southwestern Gulf of Mexico. Marine Mammal Science. 
ISSN: 1748-7692. doi.org/10.1111/mms.70040 

ABSTRACT
Movements and behavior of cetaceans are shaped by their habitat, but 
reproductive physiology can further influence residency and spatial use, 
especially in gestating and calf-­ rearing females. We analyzed a long-­ term 
photo-­ ID dataset to assess differences in residency and behavior among the 
reproductive stages (gestation, dependent calf, and interbreeding interval) of 
adult female bottlenose dolphins, in the heavily fished waters off Alvarado, 
Veracruz. From 143 surveys, we identified over 400 individuals, from which 142 
were sexed (122 females and 20 males) across five periods, spanning 2002–2023. 
Reproductive stages were reliably assigned to 11.5% of females (representing 
27% of the local core community). Individual residency and site fidelity 
metrics grouped females in three main clusters (i.e., regular residents, 
occasional residents, and occasional visitors). Females in gestation were 
rarely recorded and spent half of this stage outside our study area, whereas 
dependent calf and interbreeding interval were more common. Calf-­ rearing 
females showed higher residency and site fidelity, but their weaning period was 
within the lower range for the species (x = 2.6 years), suggesting possible 
behavioral adjustments to local human-­ induced stressors such as fishing 
pressure and vessel traffic. In contrast, males showed significantly higher 
residency indices across most metrics and periods, highlighting strong sex-­ 
based differences in spatial ecology. Behavioral budgets confirmed that this 
region remains an important feeding ground for both sexes and a nursing habitat 
for females, despite well-­ known fisheries-­ related threats. Notably, a sharp 
increase in the proportion of occasional visitor females over the end of the 
study, suggests a potential population-­ level shift. Our findings highlight 
the critical role of reproductive status in shaping fine-­ scale movement 
ecology of bottlenose dolphins and the importance of long-­ term monitoring in 
human-­ impacted ecosystems.

This article is available at:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/share/author/QKFYCFEJGXM5KZHZTNBT?target=10.1111/mms.70040
We hope you fin this work useful and look forward to your questions and 
comments.

Kind regards,

Dr. Eduardo Morteo

Director

Instituto de Investigaciones Biológicas
Universidad Veracruzana

Calle Dr. Castelazo Ayala S/N, Col. Industrial Ánimas
CP 91190, Xalapa, Veracruz, México.

Ph/Tel: +52 (228) 841 89 00 
E-mail: [email protected]

http://www.uv.mx/personal/emorteo/

http://uv-mx.academia.edu/EMorteo
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Eduardo_Morteo/?ev=hdr_xprf

http://scholar.google.com.mx/citations?user=fDUl-IIAAAAJ

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