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Yanyuwa Sea Country Marine Wildlife Surveys. Objective of the project. To gather and record information on where dolphins, dugongs and turtles are found in the Yanyuwa Sea Country . Why is this project important?. Dolphins are an important part of the marine ecosystem.
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Objective of the project • To gather and record information on where dolphins, dugongs and turtles are found in the Yanyuwa Sea Country
Why is this project important? • Dolphins are an important part of the marine ecosystem. • There is limited written knowledge about dolphins in Yanyuwa Sea Country. • Snubfin dolphins are only found in Australia, including Yanyuwa Sea Country, and thus are of high conservation value. • Increased knowledge of dolphins will help TOs and Sea Rangers protect them. • In other areas, dolphins are accidentally killed in fishing nets and speed boats, and may be shifted from their preferred areas by coastal development and noisy boats. • Local sea rangers are training so that they can continue to monitor dolphins in Yanyuwa Sea Country. • Dolphins are only one part of the natural system that the rangers are monitoring to help protect Yanyuwa Sea Country.
Combination of Methods Traditional and local knowledge Scientific knowledge
Methods – scientific survey Boat Line Transect Survey Survey Team
Sampling Training CyberTracker r x X = r sin()
Dolphin ID: Waliki wundumarlamarla a-bumirri miriyi
What did we see? Bottlenose dolphins (1 group) Snubfin dolphins (2 groups) Dugongs (21) Humpback dolphins (4 groups) Turtles (37)
Conclusions • Dolphins occur throughout much of the Yanyuwa Sea Country. • Dolphins appear to occur in low numbers in Yanyuwa country, but further surveys during different seasons are required. • The area supports a large density of turtles and dugongs. • Dolphins were very secretive compared to dolphins in other areas – could not get close to them.
Telling people about the work • Posters • Community meetings • Reports to Government • Scientific articles
What next? • Researchers will apply for more money to continue dolphin monitoring. • Rangers are keen to continue training to enable them to conduct surveys on their own. • Current results will assist the rangers and TOs with sea country planning and management.
Acknowledgements • Assistance and participation of the li-Anthawirriyarra Sea Rangers was critical for the success of the boat surveys. • Partner organisations included: • James Cook University • Flinders University • Monash University • Northern Territory Department of Natural Resources, Environment, the Arts and Sport • NAILSMA provided assistance in the use of CyberTracker and a Nomad unit to record data. • Carol Palmer provided assistance in developing Marine Wildlife-Tracker CyberTracker sequence
Summary the Dolphin Project Existing Knowledge Survey Knowledge 2009