| Literature DB >> 33828915 |
Ana Dinis1,2, Carlota Molina2,3, Marta Tobeña4, Annalisa Sambolino1,2, Karin Hartman5, Marc Fernandez1,6, Sara Magalhães7, Rui Peres Dos Santos8, Fabian Ritter9, Vidal Martín10, Natacha Aguilar de Soto11, Filipe Alves1,2.
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. ©2021 Dinis et al.Entities:
Keywords: Connectivity; Home range; Photo-identification; Residency patterns; Tursiops truncatus
Year: 2021 PMID: 33828915 PMCID: PMC8005289 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.11069
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Map showing the study area.
(A) Sagres, (B) Azores, (C) Madeira, (D) Canary Islands (extracted from Natural Earth: https://www.naturalearthdata.com/).
Summary of the photo-identification data used in this study.
| 363 | Oceanic Observatory of Madeira (OOM) | 2004–2016 | Madeira island |
| 176 | Nova Atlantis Foundation | 2003-2007 | Pico (Azores) |
| 495 | MONICET-University of Azores | 2004–2016 | Pico, Faial, São Miguel and Terceira (Azores) |
| 42 | Espaço Thalassa | 2014–2016 | Pico and Faial (Azores) |
| 182 | SECAC | 2004–2015 | La Gomera (Canary Islands) |
| 110 | SECAC | 2014 | Tenerife (Canary Islands) |
| 142 | SECAC | 2010–2011 | La Palma (Canary islands) |
| 281 | BIOECOMAC-University of La Laguna/NGO M.E.E.R. e.V. | 2001–2011 | La Palma, La Gomera and Tenerife (Canary islands) |
| 359 | Mar Ilimitado | 2007–2015 | Sagres |
Figure 2Number of individuals in the catalogues and number of individuals with matches, distributed by areas.
Figure 3Map showing the two-way movements of two bottlenose dolphins between Madeira Island and La Palma, in the Canary Islands (round-trip of ≈ 920 km).
The dots are figurative and do not reflect the exact location of the dolphins. Illustration by E. Berninsone © ARDITI.
Figure 4Map showing the movement of four bottlenose dolphins between the island of La Palma, in the Canary Islands and Madeira (≈ 500 km).
The dots are figurative and do not reflect the exact location of the dolphins. Illustration by E. Berninsone © ARDITI.
Figure 5Map showing the movement of three bottlenose dolphins between the Azores (Pico and São Miguel islands), and Madeira archipelagos (≈ 1,000 km).
The dots are figurative and do not reflect the exact location of the dolphins. Illustration by E. Berninsone © ARDITI.
Figure 6Social network diagram illustrating the associations between the dolphins with different residency patterns identified in Madeira, and the 20 dolphins seen in association in more than one archipelago.
Individual dolphins are represented by nodes and associations by the lines between nodes. Nodes color and shape indicates the archipelago of capture and residency pattern in Madeira archipelago.