We just published a Short Communication reporting that bottlenose dolphins can 
detect fishing trawlers from at least 2.6 km away, before they move to forage 
and scavenge in their wake. The article can be freely downloaded from the DOI 
link below. 
Cheers,
Giovanni Bearzi and Silvia Bonizzoni

Bearzi G., Bonizzoni S. 2026. Bottlenose dolphin detection and approach to 
distant trawlers in the northwestern Adriatic Sea. Acta Adriatica 67(1). 
https://doi.org/10.32582/aa.67.1.2

ABSTRACT – Common bottlenose dolphins *Tursiops truncatus* have adapted to 
foraging and scavenging behind fishing trawlers in many areas around the world. 
This opportunistic behaviour is widespread in Adriatic Sea waters off the 
region of Veneto, Italy. On October 1st, 2020, we tracked a group of bottlenose 
dolphins from a 6 m boat, north-east of the Po River Delta. The dolphins 
foraged behind midwater pair trawlers, then four individuals abandoned the 
vessels and engaged in fast, highly-directional movement toward another distant 
pair of midwater trawlers, at speeds of 8-14 km/h, as the trawlers moved away 
from the dolphins. After 29 min of fast directional travelling, the dolphins 
reached the midwater trawlers and immediately started foraging in their wake. 
GPS tracking of dolphin positions, combined with trawler positions obtained 
from AIS data matching vessel name/plate, revealed that the trawlers were 2.6 
km away from the dolphins when the animals first appeared to have detected them 
– consistent with reports of detection-and-approach in other seas. While 
bottlenose dolphins in our 3,000 km2 study area frequently moved from one 
fishing trawler (or pair of trawlers) to the next, the trawlers’ 
detection-and-approach event reported here was the longest observed during our 
7-year study, totalling 721 encounters with fishing trawlers and 17,432 km of 
survey effort during 129 days of monitoring trawling activities. Long-distance 
detection can theoretically enhance foraging opportunities, though the 
substantial negative effects of trawling on marine ecosystems make it difficult 
to disentangle causes and effects, and determine whether there may be net 
demographic benefits to the dolphins.

- - - - - - - 
Giovanni Bearzi
http://www.dolphinbiology.org/people/giovanni_bearzi.htm
 






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