Dear MARMAM Community,

My co-authors and I are very pleased to announce our recent publication on
how enrichment impacts dolphin welfare in zoos, with the following details:

*Cognitive Foraging Enrichment (but Not Non-Cognitive Enrichment) Improved
Several Longer-Term Welfare Indicators in Bottlenose Dolphins.* Isabella L.
K. Clegg, Mariana Domingues, Elin Ström and Linda Berggren. *Animals*, *13*(2),
238
Abstract
Bottlenose dolphins are the most common cetacean kept globally in zoos and
aquaria (hereafter zoos), and are gregarious animals with a mostly
opportunistic, generalist feeding strategy in the wild. In zoos, they have
limited to no opportunities to express natural foraging behaviours as they
receive their daily food ration of dead fish in a series of training
sessions. Enrichment provision has increased in recent years, but items are
still predominantly simple and floating in nature, and do not always target
the animals’ problem-solving or food-acquisition behaviours. These
discrepancies run concurrently with the intense debate about dolphin
welfare in zoos and how to improve it. The current study used a
within-subject design on 11 bottlenose dolphins at Kolmårdens Djurpark and
measured how several welfare indicators differed between two treatments of
“cognitive” and “non-cognitive” food-based enrichment. The treatments were
provided on an alternating basis for eight consecutive weeks: during
cognitive enrichment weeks, the animals received items which stimulated
their problem-solving and foraging behaviours, and during non-cognitive
enrichment weeks, they received simple items paired with fish (to eliminate
bias due to food value). Data were taken related to several
multidisciplinary welfare parameters during enrichment provision and
training sessions, and to activity budget behaviours throughout the week.
During the cognitive as opposed to non-cognitive enrichment weeks, the
dolphins engaged more with the enrichment, were more motivated to
participate in training sessions and performed less anticipatory and
stereotypic behaviours, suggesting that cognitive enrichment improved
several indicators of bottlenose dolphin welfare. Valuable lines of further
investigation would be to understand how individual differences and
different types of cognitive enrichment impact potential welfare benefits.
Our results suggest that enrichment items promoting cognitive foraging
behaviours may improve dolphin welfare, and therefore zoos might prioritise
giving cognitive enrichment to this species as well as considering the same
for other species with similar cognitive skills and foraging ecologies.

The article is available open access at
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2615/13/2/238#, but please let me know if you
have any issues and I can send a copy.

All the best wishes for 2023,

Isabella


Dr. Isabella Clegg

Director, Animal Welfare Expertise

www.animalwelfareexpertise.com

FB & IG: @AnimalWelfareExpertise, Twitter: @AnimWelfareExpt

Patreon: patreon.com/animalwelfareexpertise

UK: +44 7971 101 244




TEDx talk: https://youtu.be/sb_eEPDzgAg

BBC report: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-44273624
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