Dear MARMAM colleagues,
We are pleased to announce that the following paper is now available online:

Patrizia Patti, Elena Papale, Giulia Pedrazzi, Viola Cossio, Michela
Aquilina, Matthew Laspina Parisi, Jean Paul Schembri, Sofia Rinalduzzi &
Daniela Silvia Pace (2026). Overlaps of marine predators, aquaculture, and
fish-aggregating devices: Passive acoustics reveal site- and time-specific
dolphin behavior. Regional Studies in Marine Science, 94, 104793.

A PDF copy of the paper can be downloaded for free from:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rsma.2026.104793

Abstract
Aquaculture facilities and fishing procedures using floating Fish
Aggregating Devices (FADs) have recently gained increasing attention due to
the intensifying practice and ecosystem concerns. However, uncertainty
remains regarding the conservation issues for vulnerable megafauna
attracted to them. Here, we investigated the acoustic occurrence and
behavior of bottlenose dolphins in the proximity of these fishing
facilities in the Central Mediterranean Sea. Data were collected between
February and October 2024 through autonomous recorders deployed in two fish
farms and one FAD along the Maltese island’s eastern coast. Almost 300 h of
recordings were analyzed to detect dolphin vocalizations. Results showed
that bottlenose dolphins occurred at all sites, with temporal (both
seasonal and diel) and site–specific variability, and a higher presence in
the FAD proximity compared to the fish farms. Furthermore, the different
acoustic behavior displayed close to the FAD compared to the fish farms
suggests that the feeding strategy adopted requires higher coordination.
The outcomes highlight that fish artificial floating devices, both
aquaculture cages and FADs, can represent an increased opportunity for food
availability but might have a differential impact on bottlenose dolphin
behavior in Maltese archipelago, that should be evaluated to determine the
extent of this effect on the conservation of the species for implementing
appropriate sustainable management plans of the fish industry that take
into account marine mammal presence.

Keywords: Fish farms, FAD, Marine megafauna, Bottlenose dolphin, Acoustic
behavior, Central Mediterranean Sea

Please do not hesitate to contact us for any questions regarding our work.

With very best wishes,
Daniela Silvia Pace

--
Daniela Silvia Pace, PhD
National Inter-University Consortium for Marine Sciences (CoNISMa)
Tor Vergata University of Rome
Department of Biology - Ecology Lab
Via Cracovia, 1
00133 Rome, Italy
[email protected]
daniela.silvia.pace <[email protected]>@uniroma2.it
<[email protected]>

[email protected]
pec: [email protected]
mobile: +39 346 1039652
skype: lagenorinco
Orcid ID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5121-7080
Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?hl=it&user=RsYqB5QAAAAJ
Scopus: https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=26664770500

Associate Researcher
Institute for the Study of Anthropogenic Impacts
and Sustainability in the Marine Environment (IAS)
National Research Council
Via del Mare, 3
91021 Torretta Granitola (TP), Italy





Editorial Board Member for

BMC Ecology and Evolution
https://bmcecolevol.biomedcentral.com/about/editorial-board

BMC Marine Science
https://link.springer.com/journal/44479/editorial-board
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