Dolphins are becoming increasingly reliant on fishing trawlers for food, suggests new research. Three out of four bottom trawlers in the Adriatic Sea are followed by bottlenose dolphins scavenging in their wake, reveals the study.
Conservation Concerns
Conservationists say their findings suggest there isn’t enough prey for the dolphins to hunt elsewhere. The Adriatic seabed has been plowed by bottom trawlers for decades, resulting in ecosystem damage.
Many apex predators are no longer present there, with only the bottlenose dolphins left. Researchers say the frequency of their presence around fishing boats – up to 76% of the trawlers inspected by scientists off Marche, Italy, were followed by dolphins – suggests that they may be struggling to hunt normally.
Study lead author Giovanni Bearzi said: “Long-term, consistent, and deliberate association with trawlers suggests a high degree of reliance on that fishery. While dolphins would still need to forage independently when trawling does not occur, on days of trawling they forage predominantly near trawl nets.”
Impact on Dolphins
The researchers couldn’t account for the “striking” difference, but it’s unlikely to be caused by sampling bias, as they inspected more than 100 trawlers in Marche. On average, dolphins followed 41% of otter trawlers and 35% of midwater trawlers but only 1.5% of beam trawlers.
The researchers say the difference may be because the nets used by beam trawlers in the area are harder for dolphins to access and don’t target suitable prey. Study co-author Silvia Bonizzoni, of Dolphin Biology and Conservation, said: “We estimated that the bottlenose dolphin populations of Veneto and Marche, combined, exceed 1,000 individuals.
Between 86% and 90% of the dolphins, depending on region, were photographed one or more times while they were following trawlers. The evidence suggests that the majority of a relatively large community of dolphins regularly forage behind trawlers.”
Call to Action
Bearzi says dolphins have always followed fishing boats, but such normal “opportunistic” behaviour seems to have increased in intensity over time. A previous study in the Adriatic in the 1990s found that only 10% of trawlers were followed by dolphins.
Bearzi said many animals whose prey are depleted start pursuing food near humans, such as polar bears scavenging in rubbish dumps. He says trawlers could represent a simple source of nourishment in an impoverished ecosystem.
Study senior author Randall Reeves said: “It is known that bottlenose dolphins are occasionally injured or killed by trawl gear, and that foraging behind trawlers can affect dolphins’ diet, social organization, and communication. Dolphins may also suffer hearing damage that results from chronic exposure to the noise of trawlers. It is risky behaviour.”
Reeves, chairman of the committee of scientific advisors at the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission, added: “Finding sufficient prey away from trawlers in an overfished sea may be too difficult. It appears that for these animals, taking the risks is better than going hungry.”
The research team emphasized that bottlenose dolphins are resilient. If trawling were reduced or even banned to give the ecosystem a chance to rebuild, they believe dolphins would adapt and thrive as they used to before the age of trawling.
Original reporting: KTBS 3 (Shreveport) — read the source article.