Nicks 'n' Notches Online
A monthly enewsletter from the
Sarasota Dolphin Research Program
September 2021
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Are You Following #TursiopsTuesday on Social Media?
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Are you following us on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram? If not, you’re missing out on #FunFacts that we share on most Tuesdays — or, as we like to call them: #TursiopsTuesdays! Here’s a recent post.
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If you want to be sure you’re not missing out, follow us on these channels!
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Notes from the Field and Lab
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With research initiated in 1970, the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program demonstrated for the first time the residency of a community of inshore bottlenose dolphins. Subsequent work showed that the residency for Sarasota Bay dolphins was long-term, across generations and decades.
During the 1980s and 1990s, our photographic identification surveys of Tampa Bay, Charlotte Harbor, and Pine Island Sound demonstrated the existence of similar communities up and down the central west Florida coast.
Our extended surveys this year in southeast Tampa Bay, near the site of the 215-million gallon spill of polluted water from the decommissioned Piney Point phosphate mine, provide further evidence that the next dolphin community north of Sarasota Bay also exhibits long-term residency.
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Among the dolphins we've seen during Piney Point surveys are Bumpy Fin, first observed in Tampa Bay in 1984, Grasshopper (1989), along with Big Shout (1992) and her calf, Holly (2000). We've also seen Grasshopper’s two younger siblings, Allison (2000) and F240 (2004). These three calves — likely sired by the same father, FB28 — are the offspring of Pecan Sandie, the first Florida dolphin ever tagged with a satellite-linked transmitter. Her 1990 tagging showed us how dolphin ranges in Tampa Bay can overlap the northern extreme of the Sarasota dolphin community range. And the dolphins noted above continue to show this pattern of overlap.
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In a new paper, we demonstrate residency of another dolphin species.
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We were first invited by Pablo Bordino to study franciscana dolphins in 2003 and have been working closely with partners in Argentina and Brazil to support conservation for this species — one of the most threatened cetaceans in the Southwestern Atlantic — ever since.
Information on ranging patterns of franciscanas was needed to understand threat exposure for specific population units. Franciscana dolphins largely lack the distinctive natural markings that would allow for a photographic identification program similar to the one we’ve developed for Sarasota Bay dolphins, so Pablo asked us to collaborate on telemetry studies.
In 2005, we began by attaching VHF radio-tags to the franciscanas' fins and, during 2006-2013, we transitioned to satellite-linked transmitters.
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This 2008 photo shows researchers preparing to release a tagged franciscana dolphin in Argentina. Dolphins were held for a brief period while satellite-linked tags were applied and then the dolphins were released on site.
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Thanks to this research, today we know that franciscana dolphins have definable home ranges and that we can relate specific geographic-based threats to franciscana population units. That, in turn, will help local resource managers put in place more effective conservation measures to help save the species.
I’d like to recognize my co-authors on this project:
- Marta J. Cremer, Laboratory of Ecology and Conservation of Marine and Coastal Tetrapods, University of the Joinville Region – UNIVILLE, São Francisco do Sul, Santa Catarina, Brazil
- Leonardo G. Berninsone, AquaMarina – Centro de Estudios en Ciencias Marinas, Pinamar, Buenos Aires, Argentina and Departamento Conservación, Ecoparque Buenos Aires, Secretaría de Ambiente GCBA, Argentina
- Diego Albareda, AquaMarina and Departamento Conservación, Ecoparque Buenos Aires, Secretaría de Ambiente GCBA, Argentina
- Krystan A. Wilkinson, CZS-SDRP
- M. Andrew Stamper, Disney's Animals, Science, and Environment, Lake Buena Vista, Florida
- Renan L. Paitach, Laboratory of Ecology and Conservation of Marine and Coastal Tetrapods
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And most of all, I’d like to recognize Pablo Bordino, who established Fundación AquaMarina in 1998 to help protect the franciscana dolphins. Sadly, Pablo died in 2018, but today this paper is one among his many contributions to dolphin conservation.
Here's to fair winds and following seas my friend.
Randy Wells
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Name: F158, also known as Grasshopper
Age: 36
Sex: Male
A Dolphin's Life: We’ve observed Grasshopper 93 times since 1989.
He was the first observed calf of Pecan Sandie (the first Florida dolphin tagged with a satellite-linked transmitter, in 1990).
Pecan Sandie frequented the waters of southeastern Tampa Bay down into Anna Maria Sound and Palma Sola Bay. We also see Grasshopper's sister, Allison, and Allison's own calves in that area during our regular monthly population monitoring surveys. Grasshopper and his brother, F240, seem to spend more time to the north of our core study area.
Another fun fact about this lineage? We’ve observed them using a specialized foraging tactic known as “kerplunking,” named for the sound made as the dolphins lift and drive their flukes downward through the surface of the water, creating a geyser above and bubbles below that may flush fish out of hiding along the edges of seagrass meadows.
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Celebrating More than 50 Years of Research, Conservation and Education
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Support Dolphin Research Today
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Each year, it takes approximately $1 million to fund the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program. Each grant and each gift helps to ensure that we can continue to learn about and help some of the world’s most fascinating creatures.
You can help ensure the future of this important and unparalleled wild dolphin research by making a gift today.
Gift options
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Donate to the Dolphin Biology Research Institute. This Sarasota-based nonprofit organization was established in 1982 to provide critical logistical and other operational support to the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program.
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For more information on how you can help support wild dolphin research, please contact Cindy Zeigler, CZS Chief Advancement Officer, at cindy.zeigler@czs.org or 708.688.8263.
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Dolphin Biology Research Institute — DBA Sarasota Dolphin Research Program — is dedicated to research and conservation of dolphins and their habitat. Community Foundation of Sarasota County Giving Partner Profile available here.
DBRI IS A 501(C)3 ORGANIZATION — FEDERAL TAX ID #59-2288387. A COPY OF THE OFFICIAL REGISTRATION (#CH1172) AND FINANCIAL INFORMATION MAY BE OBTAINED FROM THE DIVISION OF CONSUMER SERVICES BY CALLING TOLL-FREE 1-800-435-7352 WITHIN THE STATE OR AT WWW.FDACS.GOV/CONSUMER-RESOURCES/CHARITIES. REGISTRATION DOES NOT IMPLY ENDORSEMENT, APPROVAL, OR RECOMMENDATION BY THE STATE.
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