Ultimately, our goal is to develop a comprehensive understanding and synthesis of the health impacts of oil-associated chemicals on cetaceans and develop a suite of models that will integrate available information collected prior to the spill, immediately following the spill and over the eight years following the spill, to demonstrate where impacts have occurred and to reassess the current recovery trajectories.
The grant will also help support outreach about our results not only in the scientific community, but to public groups so that we may more broadly educate society on the impact of the spill and help support a better understanding of the impacts that human activities have on our marine animal communities.
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A dolphin health assessment in Barataria Bay.
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Celebrating Our 47th Anniversary
The Sarasota Bay dolphins continue to serve as a reference population. It is because of our long-term studies here -- October marks our 47th Anniversary -- that we have baseline information on a "normal" bottlenose dolphin population to compare and contrast with other bottlenose dolphin populations elsewhere.
When we started our dolphin studies in 1970, we had no idea that our research would continue. But the more we learned about the resident cast of characters, the more we appreciated the valuable opportunity to follow these animals through time. We had no inkling back then that we would one day be studying the dolphins' health, life history, behavior, ecology, communication and the effects that human activities have on them.
And we certainly had no idea that this long-term research would become a crucial reference population for comparative studies of the health of other dolphin populations.
Over the years, research involving the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program has resulted in hundreds of scientific publications, provided data, samples, research opportunities and guidance for more than 70 graduate student theses or dissertation projects. We've documented human impacts on dolphin populations and helped to provide wildlife management agencies and the public with information that will help lessen human impacts on dolphins worldwide.
But our long-term studies aren't just about the science we've been able to accomplish over the last four-plus decades; they are also testament to public support for adding to our knowledge base about dolphins. That support has come in the form of grants from public sources, private foundations and individual donors. It has also come in the form of our enewsletter readers and
social media followers, who help us share our information so it has the broadest impact possible.
And for that, you have my most sincere thanks!
Here's to fair winds and following seas...
Randy Wells
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