Abundance and sighting patterns of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) at four northwest Atlantic coastal sites

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Cara M. Gubbins
Marthajane Caldwell
Susan G. Barco
Keith Rittmaster
Nan Bowles
Victoria Thayer

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Researchers and managers studying Atlantic coastal bottlenose dolphins along the east coast of the United States have been working on the hypothesis that there are two units within the population. One unit migrates seasonally along the northwest Atlantic coast (moving north during summer and south during autumn and winter), while the other remains in local inshore waters year-round. As part of independent, on-going studies begun in the late 1980s and mid-1990s, the occurrence of dolphins was compared among four separate sites (Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida) in 1997. The goals of the study were to test the current working hypothesis of one migrating stock of dolphins using data on abundance, distribution and sighting patterns and to calculate a minimum estimate of the population size of northwest Atlantic coastal bottlenose dolphins at the four sites. Dolphins were consistently present in Virginia from April to October and year-round in North Carolina, South Carolina and Florida. In total, 7,830 dolphins were counted and 2,839 identifications were made. Monthly dolphin counts and water temperatures were positively correlated at the Virginia, South Carolina and Florida sites. After adjusting for effort, monthly dolphin counts were significantly different among the four sites but new identification rates were not. The monthly resighting rates were significantly higher in Florida than at the other sites. Based on mark-recapture analysis, it was estimated that 2,392 coastal bottlenose dolphins were present at the four sites in 1997. This estimate is similar to published abundance estimates for dolphins along the entire US Atlantic coast (2,482). These results support the hypothesis of multiple population units with distinct movement patterns and suggest that published abundance estimates for coastal bottlenose dolphins are greatly underestimated.

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