Dear MARMAM community, My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent publication in Marine Mammal Science, "Stock identity of stranded Tamanend's bottlenose dolphins (*Tursiops erebennus*) with evidence of fisheries interaction in Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, 1996–2019".
*ABSTRACT* The complex population structure of Tamanend's bottlenose dolphins (*Tursiops erebennus*) along the U.S. Mid-Atlantic coast complicates assessment of their bycatch. To improve our understanding of the stock identity of individual dolphins taken as bycatch in this region, we compared images of the dorsal fins of bottlenose dolphins that stranded with evidence of fishery interactions (FI+) to the Mid-Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin Catalog (MABDC). We obtained stranding data from NOAA Fisheries for 715 FI+ bottlenose dolphins from Virginia (VA), North Carolina (NC), and South Carolina (SC) from 1996 to 2019; approximately two thirds of these records included dorsal fin images. For records for which images were available, we applied restrictive criteria for image quality and dorsal fin distinctiveness and compared the remaining 145 distinctive FI+ individuals to the MABDC. We matched 18 dolphins to regional catalogs and assigned stock identity to 13 of the matches; two were from migratory coastal stocks and 11 were from small estuarine stocks in NC and SC. Our analysis demonstrates how the risk of bycatch varies across bottlenose dolphin stocks along the Mid-Atlantic coast, provides an important feedback information loop to stranding responders and researchers studying dolphins in the field, and informs conservation efforts to address bycatch of bottlenose dolphins in this region. The link to the published article is here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mms.70147 If you would like to receive a PDF copy of the article, please contact me ( [email protected]). Best regards, Kim Urian
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