Dear colleagues,

On behalf of all co-authors, we are excited to share with you our new 
publication in Ecology and Evolution: Haigh, K., Parra, G.J., Möller, L., 
Steiner, A. and Bossley, M. (2025), Long-Term Demographic Trends of Near 
Threatened Coastal Dolphins Living in an Urban Estuary. Ecol Evol, 15: e70834. 
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70834
ABSTRACT
Understanding population demography of threatened species and how they vary in 
relation to natural and anthropogenic stressors is essential for effective 
conservation. We used a long-term photographic capture-recapture dataset 
(1993–2020) of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) in the 
highly urbanised Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary (ADS), South Australia, to estimate 
key demographic parameters and their variability over time. These parameters 
were analysed in relation to environmental variables used as indicators of 
local and large-scale climatic events. Our findings indicate that apparent 
survival was high (0.98–0.99) and did not vary seasonally. Estimates of 
abundance were not directly related to environmental variables but were linked 
to seasonal temporary emigration. Abundance peaked in summer with an average of 
85.37 dolphins (SD = 30.23) and was lowest in winter, with 68.57 (SD = 24.70) 
individuals. Site fidelity at the population level was low, but lagged 
identification rates revealed a population of approximately 28 individuals at 
any one time. Trend analysis suggests an increase in dolphin abundance from 
1993 and persistence of the population over decades despite significant 
urbanisation, although numbers have declined in more recent years. Further 
research is needed to understand the cumulative impacts leading to this 
population decline and to assess its future viability under different 
management scenarios. Conservation strategies aimed at increasing reproductive 
rates and promoting connectivity to adjacent waters are likely to be more 
effective in reversing population declines.
The article is open access and available here: 
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ece3.70834
All the best,
Guido

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Guido J. Parra, PhD
Associate Professor | College of Science and Engineering
Research leader | Cetacean Ecology, Behaviour and Evolution Lab (CEBEL)

Staff: http://www.flinders.edu.au/people/guido.parra
Lab: www.cebel.org.au<http://www.cebel.org.au>

GoogleScholar<https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?hl=en&user=7YisEoAAAAAJ> 
| ResearchGate<https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Guido_Parra> | 
LinkedIn<https://www.linkedin.com/in/guido-j-parra-093217183/>

Flinders University, GPO Box 2100 Adelaide, SA 5001 Australia
Tel: +61 8 8201 3565|email: 
guido.pa...@flinders.edu.au<mailto:guido.pa...@flinders.edu.au>
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