Abstract

Dolphins of the genus Stenella occur in pelagic waters of both tropical and warm-temperate oceans. Three species, the Atlantic spotted dolphin (Stenella frontalis), the pantropical spotted dolphin (S. attenuata), and the spinner dolphin (S. longirostris) are abundant worldwide, but in the Caribbean Basin they have been poorly studied and information on their distribution patterns is scarce. Specifically, in Colombia’s remote Seaflower Biosphere Reserve (SFBR) S. attenuata has been reported occasionally, but S. frontalis and S. longirostris have never been recorded before. To address this information gap, an ecological niche modeling approach was used to determine the potential distribution patterns of these three dolphin species in the region. Records of these species for the Caribbean Basin were compiled, including both published and unpublished data. Environmental information, including bathymetry, bathymetric slope, distance to shore, sea surface temperature, sea surface salinity, and chlorophyll-a concentration was gathered from public databases (MARSPEC and Bio-ORACLE) in raster format. The maximum entropy algorithm (Maxent) for modeling species’ geographic distributions with presence-only data was used. After filtering the data, 210 records of S. attenuata, 204 of S. frontalis, and 80 of S. longirostris were used to run models. The best configuration for each model was chosen based on the ΔAICc criterion. For all three species, the final ecological niche models returned AUC test values higher than 0.8, indicating satisfactory model performance. The resulting potential distribution maps suggested that areas closest to continental shorelines of the Caribbean Basin and surrounding islands had the highest environmental suitability for all species (>70%). All models reported high environmental suitability for S. attenuata and S. longirostris in the SFBR, mainly in the southernmost part surrounding San Andres and Providence Archipelago. Assessment of niche overlap from the predictions of species distributions using the similarity statistic and pairwise map overlap indicated that S. frontalis and S. longirostris had niches slightly more similar in comparison to S. attenuata. As this was a first effort to fill a gap in our understanding of the distribution of species in the genus Stenella in the Caribbean Basin, further studies are necessary using both niche modeling and biological/ecological approaches.

Highlights

  • The ocean comprises 70% of the planet and offers a wide range of habitats to marine life (e.g., Spalding et al, 2012; Kelley et al, 2016)

  • This study established a series of potential “baseline” ecological niche models for Atlantic spotted dolphins, pantropical spotted dolphins and spinner dolphins

  • These models were used for assessing their distribution patterns in the Caribbean Basin, in the Seaflower Biosphere Reserve (SFBR)

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Summary

Introduction

The ocean comprises 70% of the planet and offers a wide range of habitats to marine life (e.g., Spalding et al, 2012; Kelley et al, 2016) These different habitats are characterized by gradients in sea surface temperature (SST), sea surface salinity (SSS), productivity, and topography at both broad and local scales (Redfern et al, 2006), playing an important role to explain distribution patterns of marine top predators such as cetaceans (e.g., Baumgartner et al, 2001; Palacios et al, 2013b). Dolphins of the genus Stenella (Gray, 1866) are common in tropical, subtropical, and temperate waters worldwide Because of such wide distribution patterns, they are often considered “umbrella species,” since any conservation efforts made on their behalf benefit many other species within their habitat (Jefferson et al, 2008). Some species within the genus are considered sympatric throughout their distribution, at an individual level they appear to have distinct environmental requirements at regional scales (e.g., Baumgartner et al, 2001; Davis et al, 2002; do Amaral et al, 2015)

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