Search results for "dolphin"

showing 10 items of 60 documents

Intestinal Helminth Fauna of Bottlenose DolphinTursiops truncatusand Common DolphinDelphinus delphisfrom the Western Mediterranean

2012

We report on the intestinal helminth fauna of 15 bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus and 6 short-beaked common dolphins Delphinus delphis from the western Mediterranean. Eight helminth species were found in bottlenose dolphin, i.e., the digeneans Synthesium tursionis, Brachycladium atlanticum, and Pholeter gastrophilus, the nematode Anisakis sp., and the cestodes Tetrabothrius forsteri, Diphyllobothrium sp., Strobilocephalus triangularis, and tetraphyllidean plerocercoids. Brachycladium atlanticum, S. triangularis , and tetraphyllidean plerocercoids are new host records. No T. forsteri had previously been reported in Mediterranean bottlenose dolphins. Three species of helminths were reco…

MalebiologyCommon dolphinHost (biology)EcologyCommon DolphinsFaunaDelphinus delphisBottlenose dolphinbiology.organism_classificationAnisakisBottle-Nosed DolphinIntestinesHelminthsbiology.animalMediterranean SeaAnimalsHelminthsFemaleParasitologyHelminthiasis AnimalIntestinal Diseases ParasiticEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsDiphyllobothriumJournal of Parasitology
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Presence of genital spines in a male Corynosoma cetaceum Johnston and Best, 1942 (Acanthocephala).

2002

We collected 83 females and 80 males of Corynosoma cetaceum from 2 common dolphins, Delphinus delphis, collected in northern Patagonia (Argentina). Worms were most similar to specimens collected in other South American localities. However, 1 male had 2 spines adjacent to the genital pore and isolated from the rest of body spines. This finding confirms the recent reassignment of C. cetaceum to Corynosoma. Absence of genital spines is suggested to be avoided as the sole criterion to exclude specimens from Corynosoma or Andracantha.

MalebiologyDolphinsAndracanthaArgentinaCetaceaDelphinus delphisAnatomyCorynosoma cetaceumbiology.organism_classificationAcanthocephalaSouth americanbiology.animalAnimalsSex organParasitologyFemaleAcanthocephalaEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsThe Journal of parasitology
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Epidemiological pattern of tattoo skin disease: a potential general health indicator for cetaceans

2009

The presence of tattoo skin disease (TSD) was examined in 1392 free-ranging and dead odontocetes comprising 17 species from the Americas, Europe, South Africa, New Zealand and Greenland. We investigated whether TSD prevalence varied with sex, age and health status. TSD was encountered in cetaceans from the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans as well as in those from the North, Mediterranean and Tasman Seas. No clear patterns related to geography and host phylogeny were detected, except that prevalence of TSD in juveniles and, in 2 species (dusky dolphin Lagenorhynchus obscurus and Burmeister’s porpoise Phocoena spinipinnis), in adults was remarkably high in samples from Peru. Environmental factors …

Maleendocrine systemZoologyCetaceaPhocoenaPoxviridae InfectionsDelphinus delphisAquatic ScienceSkin DiseasesAnimal DiseasesCetacea [whales dolphins and porpoises]Age DistributionSex FactorsCephalorhynchus eutropiabiology.animalAnimalsEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyEcologyAquatic animalPhocoena spinipinnisbiology.organism_classificationDusky dolphinFemaleCetaceaChordopoxvirinaePorpoise
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Influence of environmental factors on small cetacean distribution in the Spanish Mediterranean

2008

Habitat distribution models are one of the most up to date methods to study the habitat usage of wildlife populations. They allow animal distribution to be related to environmental features and also the prediction of the distribution of animals based on this relationship. Seasonal aerial surveys were conducted in central Spanish Mediterranean waters from June 2000 to March 2003 to obtain information on the distribution of cetacean species. Data from the three most common cetacean species (striped dolphin,Stenella coeruleoalba, bottlenose dolphin,Tursiops truncatus, and Risso's dolphin,Grampus griseus) were related, using generalized linear models, to local environmental features: depth, slo…

Mediterranean climatebiologyEcologyWildlifeCetaceaStenella coeruleoalbaAquatic ScienceBottlenose dolphinbiology.organism_classificationFisheryHabitatbiology.animalMarine protected areaGrampus griseusJournal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
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An insight into the status of the striped dolphins, Stenella coeruleoalba, of the southern Tyrrenian Sea

2007

Drift-nets are known to result in high incidental catches of some cetacean species. Despite a UN moratorium on their use in the high seas and a ban in the Mediterranean by all European Union countries, including Italy (EC Reg. 1239/98), some fisheries continue to operate illegally. In 2002 and 2003 three line-transect surveys were conducted in the southern Tyrrhenian Sea around the Aeolian archipelago. These transects were designed to assess the presence, distribution and population size of cetacean species likely to be affected by accidental captures in this area. Data were only sufficient to estimate abundance for the striped dolphin. The best estimate (and first such estimate for this ar…

Mediterranean climatebiologySouth-TyrrhenianPopulation sizeCetaceaStenella coeruleoalbastriped dolphins; South-TyrrhenianAquatic Sciencebiology.organism_classificationstriped dolphinsFisheryGeographyOceanographyManagement implicationsAbundance (ecology)biology.animalmedia_common.cataloged_instanceEuropean unionTransectmedia_common
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Hadwenius tursionis (Marchi, 1873) n. comb. (Digenea, Campulidae) from the bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus (Montagu, 1821) in the western Medit…

1994

The taxonomic position of Synthesium tursionis (Marchi, 1873) (Digenea, Campulidae) is revised, based on material from 147 worms from four bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus stranded off the Comunidad Valenciana (Spanish western Mediterranean). The species is transferred to Hadwenius, as H. tursionis n. comb., and characterised by a high length/width ratio of the body, spinose cirrus and unarmed metraterm. Synthesium, a monotypic genus, becomes a synonym of Hadwenius. The intraspecific variation of some morphological traits is briefly discussed.

Mediterranean seabiologyEcologyAnimal ecologyCetaceaParasitologyTaxonomy (biology)Trematodabiology.organism_classificationBottlenose dolphinDigeneaIntraspecific competitionSystematic Parasitology
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Dolphin morbillivirus epizootic resurgence, Mediterranean Sea

2008

In July 2007, > 100 striped dolphins, Stenella coeruleoalba, were found dead along the coast of the Spanish Mediterranean. Of 10 dolphins tested, 7 were positive for a virus strain closely related to the dolphin morbillivirus that was isolated during a previous epizootic in 1990.

Microbiology (medical)Mediterranean climateEpidemiologylcsh:MedicineStenella coeruleoalbalcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseasesDisease OutbreaksMediterranean seaStenellaMorbillivirusVirus strainbiology.animalMediterranean SeamedicineAnimalslcsh:RC109-216Epizooticre-emerging diseasebiologydolphinlcsh:RDispatchbiology.organism_classificationStenellamedicine.diseaseCetacean morbillivirusmorbillivirusFisheryInfectious DiseasesSpainMorbillivirus Infections
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Microtriches of tetraphyllidean metacestodes from Western Mediterranean striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba)

2005

The tegumental structures of two types of tetraphyllidean plerocercoids and two types of merocercoids (Phyllobothrium delphini and Monorygma grimaldii) from Mediterranean striped dolphins, Stenella coeruleoalba, are described for the first time using scanning electron microscopy. The tegument of all of the specimens was fully covered with microtriches. Four basic types were found: filitriches, blade-like spinitriches of different sizes and shapes, cone-shaped spinitriches (with two parallel small projections of equal length at the apex), and crowned cylindrical spinitriches (with 6–7 small papillae forming a crown at the apex); the two latter types are newly described. The two types of pler…

Microscopy Electron Scanning TransmissionbiologyDolphinsCetaceaStenella coeruleoalbaAnatomyViral tegumentCestode Infectionsbiology.organism_classificationTetraphyllideaApex (mollusc)biology.animalPlerocercoidSuckerAnimalsCestodaAnimal Science and ZoologyMicrotrichesDevelopmental BiologyJournal of Morphology
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Pinger affects fish catch efficiency and damage to bottom gill nets related to bottlenose dolphins

2009

There is some evidence that the presence of Tursiops truncatus in fishing areas represents a real economic threat to fishermen due the dolphin feeding on the entangled fish, damaging the nets and reducing the fish catch. We have carried out experiments to assess the efficiency of a pinger in decreasing the interaction between the dolphins and fishing nets, in a fishing area off the coast of southern Italy, where Tursiops truncatus is frequently observed to interact with bottom gill nets. Two identical monofilament bottom gill nets (900 m long), one equipped with pingers and the other without, were used to measure the effect of these pingers on the abundance of the catch and net damage. For …

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaDolphin-fishery interactionBottom gill netsFishingDepredationAquatic animalMediterraneanAquatic ScienceBiologyMarine Mammals Fishery Mediterranean SeaAquatic organismsFisheryLong periodFish <Actinopterygii>PingerFisheries Science
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By-catch of cetaceans and other species of conservation concern during pair trawl fishing operations in the Adriatic Sea (Italy)

2010

By-catch is one of the main sources of anthropogenic mortality in marine species of conservation concern worldwide. Between 2006 and 2008, the Consorzio Nazionale Interuniversitario per le Scienze del Mare (CoNISMa) coordinated a monitoring programme of cetacean by-catch in Italian pelagic trawlers, funded in compliance with European Regulation 812/2004. Sixteen independent observers monitored a total of 3141 hauls. The observation coverage ranged between 0.9 and 6.3% of the regional fishing effort. Almost all by-catch events were recorded in the northern Adriatic Sea. By-catch rates of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) and loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) were 0.0006 and 0.0255 …

Settore BIO/07 - EcologiaEcologybiologyFishingCetaceaPelagic zonebiology.organism_classificationChondrichthyeslaw.inventionTotal mortalityBycatchFisheryOceanographyMediterranean seaGeographylawGeneral Earth and Planetary Sciencescetacean monitoring fishing effort bottlenose dolphins loggerhead turtles sharks raysTurtle (robot)Ecology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGeneral Environmental ScienceChemistry and Ecology
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