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Black Sea bottlenose dolphin

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Black Sea bottlenose dolphin
Temporal range: Holocene
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Delphinidae
Genus: Tursiops
Species:
Subspecies:
T. t. ponticus
Trinomial name
Tursiops truncatus ponticus
(Barabash-Nikiforov, 1940)

The Black Sea bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus ponticus) is a subspecies of the common bottlenose dolphin. Recent findings suggest that they differ from the common bottlenose dolphin based on slight differences in cranial activity and genetic composition.[citation needed] This species occupies the Black Sea, and is less frequently studied than the more common Atlantic bottlenose dolphin.

Ecology and behavior

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Based on the range of the Black Sea bottlenose dolphin, their diet consists of many available coastal fish. This includes but is not limited to red mullet, flounder, mullet, anchovy, herring, horse mackerel, and stingrays. The increasing dispersal and limits of pelagic fish off the coast of human settlements is likely the cause of the shift in the dolphins' diet to benthic fishes, bringing them closer to coastal areas where populations of prey are more readily available.

A study that investigated the group dynamics of Black Sea bottlenose dolphin individuals off of the coast of Crimea showed that the dolphins that live in the Black Sea have specific social-spatiotemporal structures that have allowed them to live cooperatively in this geographical region and help one another hunt for and find food sources. The use of echolocation tones and frequencies were tracked throughout the seasons of each year to find what kind of groups/individuals of sex and age occupy the region at a given time. The study found that Black Sea bottlenose dolphin populations live in groups of 2-10 individuals that do not separate based on distinct barriers from one another, rather than by more closely related individuals, such as a mother and her calves, and stress the importance of close-knit social structures in the Black Sea dolphins.[2]

Studies of Black Sea bottlenose dolphin hematology also provided much insight into the chemistry of the bottlenose subspecies based on the environment they have occupied over time. In certain sample studies, analysis of dolphin blood showed that the chemical composition of these individuals is unique to the environment they occupy. This includes a total concentration of 156.48mmol/L of potassium concentration, 29.94micrommol/L iron concentration, 118.28mmol concentration of chloride as well as a 71.395g/L total protein concentration in the blood. Though this study was limited to individuals kept at the Lithuanian Sea Museum, it nevertheless showed no statistical significance in deviation from the entire population, showing a generalization of the chemical composition of the subspecies.[3]

Conservation

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The Black Sea is a flourishing area for tourist attractions such as boat rides that specialize in dolphin sightings. However these tours often move directly through the established territorial regions of some coastal populations. An increase in human intrusion creates population fragmentation that can damage the social relationships among grounds.[citation needed]

The safety and numbers of the Black Sea dolphins have been severely impacted by the destruction from the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. Bombs have been dropped in coastal feeding areas and pollution from spilled oil and chemical runoff has increased sharply. Numerous reports from Turkey, Romania, and Ukraine have found thousands of dead dolphins washed up onto beaches.[4][5] Russian Navy sonar and missile firings are also having a deleterious effect. Ukrainian scientists estimated that 50,000 died during 2022.[6][7]

References

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  1. ^ "Tursiops truncatus ssp. ponticus (Black Sea Bottlenose Dolphin)". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  2. ^ Logominova, I.V; Agafonov, A.V (September 2021). "Local Community of Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops Truncatus Ponticus Barabash, 1940) in Waters of Southeastern Crimea". Oceanology. 61 (5): 677. doi:10.1134/S0001437021040093. S2CID 244480515.
  3. ^ Kleiva, Žilvinas (December 2013). "INVESTIGATION OF BLOOD PARAMETERS OF THE BLACK SEA DOLPHINS (Tursiops Truncatus Ponticus) KEPT AT THE LITHUANIAN SEA MUSEUM". Veterinarija Ir Zootechnika. 65 (87): 30-36.
  4. ^ Santora, Marc (2022-06-02). "Dolphins Dying in Black Sea, and May Be Casualties of War, Scientists Say". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-06-02.
  5. ^ "Basın Bülteni – Karadeniz Kıyılarında Görülen Olağandışı Yunus Ölümleri Hakkında | TÜDAV" (in Turkish). Retrieved 2022-06-02.
  6. ^ Tens Of Thousands Of Dead Dolphins Among Environmental Casualties Of Ukraine War, retrieved 2022-12-03
  7. ^ "Ukraine's animals are also victims of the war". The Economist. 7 March 2024. Retrieved 18 March 2024.
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