Dear MARMAM community,


My coauthors and I are pleased to share our new paper titled "Large-scale 
movements of common bottlenose dolphins in the Atlantic: dolphins with an 
international courtyard"

 Dinis A, Molina C, Tobeña M, Sambolino A, Hartman K, Fernandez M, Magalhães S, 
dos Santos RP, Ritter F, Martín V, Aguilar de Soto N, Alves F.2021.Large-scale 
movements of common bottlenose dolphins in the Atlantic: dolphins with an 
international courtyard.PeerJ 9:e11069 https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11069



ABSTRACT

Wide-ranging connectivity patterns of common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops 
truncatus) are generally poorly known worldwide and more so within the oceanic 
archipelagos of Macaronesia in the North East (NE) Atlantic. This study aimed 
to identify long-range movements between the archipelagos of Macaronesia that 
lie between 500 and 1,500 km apart, and between Madeira archipelago and the 
Portuguese continental shelf, through the compilation and comparison of 
bottlenose dolphin’s photo-identification catalogues from different regions: 
one from Madeira (n = 363 individuals), two from different areas in the Azores 
(n = 495 and 176), and four from different islands of the Canary Islands (n = 
182, 110, 142 and 281), summing up 1791 photographs. An additional comparison 
was made between the Madeira catalogue and one catalogue from Sagres, on the 
southwest tip of the Iberian Peninsula (n = 359). Results showed 26 individual 
matches, mostly between Madeira and the Canary Islands (n = 23), and between 
Azores and Madeira (n = 3). No matches were found between the Canary Islands 
and the Azores, nor between Madeira and Sagres. There were no individuals 
identified in all three archipelagos. The minimum time recorded between 
sightings in two different archipelagos (≈ 460 km apart) was 62 days. 
Association patterns revealed that the individuals moving between archipelagos 
were connected to resident, migrant and transient individuals in Madeira. The 
higher number of individuals that were re-sighted between Madeira and the 
Canary Islands can be explained by the relative proximity of these two 
archipelagos. This study shows the first inter-archipelago movements of 
bottlenose dolphins in the Macaronesia region, emphasizing the high mobility of 
this species and supporting the high gene flow described for oceanic dolphins 
inhabiting the North Atlantic. The dynamics of these long-range movements 
strongly denotes the need to review marine protected areas established for this 
species in each archipelago, calling for joint resolutions from three 
autonomous regions belonging to two EU countries.



Kind regards,

Ana Dinis, PhD in Biological Sciences,Insular Whale Ecology 
TeamMARE-ARDITI/OOMPhone: +351291721216http://www.mare-centre.pt/en/user/8218

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