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Bottlenose dolphin strands at Porthtowan |
20th December 2006
The
body of a bottlenose dolphin, a rare animal in Cornwall, was
retrieved by volunteers yesterday from a cove at Porthtowan on the
north coast. The male dolphin was reported to the Marine Strandings
Network of the Cornwall Wildlife Trust by one of its new volunteers,
Dominique Strover, who lives nearby.
Measuring just under 3 metres, the male dolphin presented a real
challenge for the Strandings Volunteers as it weighed around 200kg.
As Gary Hawkins, one of the volunteers explained, "It was
found in a small cove to the west of Porthtowan and it would have
been really difficult to carry the dolphin off the beach, even
though there were six of us to help lift it. Luckily, a Reserves
Officer from the Cornwall Wildlife Trust and one
of our very experienced volunteers, Rory Goodall, of Environmental
Tours, were both able to provide 4x4 vehicles
and a trailer to enable us to get around
the rocks at low tide and remove the dolphin from the beach. It was
then taken to the Veterinary Laboratories Agency at Polwhele for
autopsy."
Ruth Williams, Marine Conservation Officer of the Trust said, "We
were very keen to secure the dolphin for post-mortem
examination. The resident population of bottlenose dolphins around
Cornwall is now so small that any loss, for whatever reason, is of
vital importance. We need to get as much information from the animal
as possible to support our work for the long-term conservation of
this well-loved species. I examined the animal on the beach but
couldn't find any obvious external injuries to indicate cause of
death, although it was covered in rake, or tooth, marks from other
bottlenose dolphins, which can often be a sign of aggression. It
didn't appear to have been caught in nets, but a post-mortem
will hopefully tell us why it died."
The Marine Strandings Network has recorded only six dead
bottlenose dolphins in the last five years. This may seem like good
news but the reason for the low number is more likely to be that
there are so few left and there are real concerns that their numbers
in Cornwall are dropping too low for the population to carry on.
Local cetacean scientist, Nick Tregenza commented, "This species
is the one so many people have seen and love. We estimate that there
are perhaps only between 12 and 20 animals of this species in the
inshore waters of Cornwall and the south-west."
"They were lost from the south-west in
the 1960s, probably as a result of pesticide pollution and they then
re-colonised Cornish waters in 1991. There has been great progress
on the pesticide issue and we hoped this inshore group would
multiply back up to the numbers of old, but actually it has dwindled
slowly for several years. Bottlenose dolphins are remarkable animals
with a huge brain and are one of the tiny handfuls of species that
are intelligent enough to recognise themselves in a mirror. They
live for up to 40 years, possibly more, and the group around
Cornwall could not sustain a death rate of even one animal per year,
long term. The loss of an adult is particularly serious and the
biggest single risk to them is probably inshore gill netting. In
their very precarious state it is vital we continue to monitor their
numbers and movements and try to identify all causes of death."
This dolphin brings the number of dead cetaceans recorded by the
Network in 2006 to 170, a 70% increase on 2005 and, as the year
draws to an end, the worst time for dolphin deaths is about to begin
so the figure is expected to rise. The public is urged to continue
to report dead stranded dolphins, seals and other marine life to
our Marine Strandings Network 24-hour
Hotline on 0845 201 2626.