Simon Elwen

Ecology and Conservation of Coastal Dolphins in Namibia

Bottlenose dolphin against the Namibian desert.

Heaviside's dolphin leaping off Pelican Point, Walvis Bay.

Poster.jpg

Town/RegionCountryCategoriesDate
Walvis BayNamibiaAfrica, Mammals, Marine29 Apr 2008

Very little data exist on the ecology of the three species of dolphins found in Namibian coastal waters (Heaviside’s, dusky and bottlenose), despite potentially significant anthropogenic threats in the environment, including bycatch, pollution, prey depletion by fisheries and uncontrolled eco-tourism. Of chief concern is the Heaviside’s dolphin which has a limited range and is endemic to the Benguela current region (IUCN Red Data List: Data deficient).

Baseline data on the abundance, movements, habitat choice and distribution are urgently needed for all the coastal delphinid species of Namibia to allow for evaluation of the conservation status of these populations. Walvis Bay has been chosen as the site of the initial study as it is the largest area of human coastal habitation in Namibia, and thus the area where human threats to the dolphin populations are likely to the highest.

The aims of the project are:

1) To generate an abundance estimate of (i) Heaviside's and (ii) bottlenose dolphins in the Walvis Bay area using photographic mark-recapture techniques.

2) To describe key habitats used by (i) Heaviside's (ii) bottlenose and (iii) dusky dolphins within the near shore environment in the Walvis Bay region as related to animal behaviour (feeding, resting etc) and human impacts in the environment.

3) To build local research capacity by involving local scientists, conservators and students as far as possible and providing them with basic training in the field and analytical techniques required for effective cetacean surveys and photo-ID and stranded animal data collection.

This study will add significantly the body of knowledge on Heaviside’s dolphins as a species and have relevance to their conservation at both a local and population level. The data produced will be directly fed back to managers and role players to allow for informed decision making to increase protective measures where necessary.

For more information contact s_elwen@yahoo.com

Project Update: June 2008

10 June 2008: Field work for the Namibian Dolphin Project is now under way in Walvis Bay. Investigatory trips on tour boats and initial dedicated surveys indicate clear differences in the use of the bay by bottlenose and Heaviside's dolphins. The bottlenose dolphins predominantly use the inshore environment along the open coast with occasional trips into the lagoon, while the Heaviside's dolphins seem to aggregate regularly at the tip of the bay, but are rare everywhere else.

Although tourism pressure is high in terms of boat numbers, local weather conditions limit the interaction time with animals to a short period during the mornings. The project has been very well received locally and many of the tour operators are contributing photographs to our growing catalogue of identifiable dolphins. We are also collating the existing informal data on stranding events as there is currently no formal stranding network in Namibia.

For more information go to http://namibiandolphinproject.blogspot.com/

Final Report

Read about the activities undertaken and findings of this project in the final report below.

Also below is a poster that a colleague and I are presenting at the European Cetacean Society conference later this month. It is a part of the work we are doing here in Namibia.

File DownloadSize
Final Report.pdf179.98 KB
Poster.pdf368.87 KB
2nd RSG Grant Awarded

Congratulations to Simon for his second RSG, to read about this project http://www.ruffordsmallgrants.org/rsg/projects/simon_elwen_0


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