The following article was recently published in the Autumn 2010 issue of the
Journal of Cetacean Research and Management:

Speakman, T.R., S.M. Lane, L.H. Schwacke, P.A. Fair, and E.S. Zolman. 2010. 
Mark-recapture estimates of
seasonal abundance and survivorship for bottlenose dolphins (/Tursiops 
truncatus/)
near Charleston, South Carolina, USA. Journal of Cetacean Research and 
Management
11(2):153-162.

ABSTRACT:
The stock structure of western North Atlantic bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops 
truncatus)
is complex, with seasonally migratory stocks often overlapping with year-round 
resident
stocks. High rates of exchange between northernmost sites have been documented 
but movement
and seasonal fluctuation in abundance among sites along the southern portion of 
the US
Atlantic coast is not well understood. To better understand seasonal abundance, 
a three-year
mark-recapture study of bottlenose dolphins in coastal and estuarine waters 
near Charleston,
South Carolina, USA was conducted. A robust design was employed in order to 
minimise bias and
more precisely determine seasonal estimates of abundance and concurrently 
examine temporary
immigration/emigration and survivorship. Systematic boat-based surveys were 
carried out (n = 192)
from January 2004 to December 2006. The entire study area was surveyed one week 
per month; an
additional survey was conducted in the months in which seasonal abundance was 
estimated:
January (winter), April (spring), July (summer) and October (autumn). Standard 
photo-identification
techniques were used to accumulate sightings of 521 distinctively marked 
dolphins, 65% of which
were sighted more than once. Pollock's robust design was applied using MARK and 
the ensuing
 abundance estimates were adjusted for the seasonal proportion of unmarked 
dolphins (ranging
from 0.27 to 0.40) in the population. Estimates ranged from 364 (95% CI = 
305--442) in January
2004 to 910 (95% CI = 819--1018) in October 2006. Summer abundance estimates 
were consistently
greater than those from winter months, although estimates varied considerably 
among years. The
same model was used to calculate an annual survival rate estimate of 0.951 (95% 
CI = 0.882--1.00)
for marked individuals within the population. A high degree of transience, 
demonstrated by seasonal
influxes of single-sighted individuals, made it difficult to differentiate 
between mortality and
permanent emigration. The results support the occurrence of three distinct 
dolphin groups found in
Charleston waters: year-round residents; seasonal residents; and transients. 
Reporting abundance
and survivorship estimates together is useful in explaining and validating 
results for populations
in which transient individuals occur. These results provide important 
information for stock and
viability assessment of coastal bottlenose dolphins in the western North 
Atlantic.


KEYWORDS:
BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN; PHOTO-ID; SURVIVORSHIP; ABUNDANCE ESTIMATE; MARK-RECAPTURE; 
NORTH
AMERICA; NORTHERN HEMISPHERE


For further information and pdf requests, please contact Todd Speakman:
todd.speak...@noaa.gov



_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to