4.7 Article

Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) Whistle Modulation during a Trawl Bycatch Event in the Adriatic Sea

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 11, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani11123593

Keywords

bottlenose dolphin; whistle; bycatch; signature; acoustic communication; stress

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The presence of dolphins in fishing areas can lead to economic losses for fishermen due to their depredation activities, and bycatch events are a major cause of mortality for conservation species. This study focuses on the acoustic parameters detected in whistle signals of Bottlenose dolphins during a bycatch event in the Adriatic Sea, revealing their acoustic plasticity and ability to communicate discomfort through their vocal repertoire.
Simple Summary There is some evidence that the presence of dolphins in fishing areas represents a concrete economic loss for fishermen due to their depredation activities on the entangled fish on the nets. Bycatch events are one of the major sources of anthropogenic mortality of species of conservation interest in the world. T. truncatus is a plastic species and the more frequently observed species in the Adriatic Sea owing to the natural tendency to interact with the fishing activities in the area. This case report describes the acoustic parameters detected in whistle spectral contours associated with low-frequency signals recorded with a passive acoustic monitoring device in an exceptional event of bycatch that involved three individuals during a midwater commercial trawling in the Adriatic Sea. Marine mammal vocal elements have been investigated for decades to assess whether they correlate with stress levels or stress indicators. Due to their acoustic plasticity, the interpretation of dolphins' acoustic signals of has been studied most extensively. This work describes the acoustic parameters detected in whistle spectral contours, collected using passive acoustic monitoring (PAM), in a bycatch event that involved three Bottlenose dolphins during midwater commercial trawling. The results indicate a total number of 23 upsweep whistles recorded during the bycatch event, that were analyzed based on the acoustic parameters as follows: (Median; 25th percentile; 75th percentile) D-r (second), total duration (1.09; 0.88; 1.24); f(min) (HZ), minimum frequency (5836.4; 5635.3; 5967.1); f(max) (HZ), maximum frequency, (11,610 +/- 11,293; 11,810); f(c) (HZ), central frequency; (8665.2; 8492.9; 8982.8); BW (HZ), bandwidth (5836.4; 5635.3; 5967.1); Step, number of step (5; 4; 6). Furthermore, our data show that vocal production during the capture event was characterized by an undescribed to date combination of two signals, an ascending whistle (upsweep), and a pulsed signal that we called low-frequency signal in the frequency band between 4.5 and 7 kHz. This capture event reveals a novel aspect of T. truncatus acoustic communication, it confirms their acoustic plasticity, and suggests that states of discomfort are conveyed through their acoustic repertoire.

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