Abstract

The nearest known population of common dolphins (Delphinus sp.) to the Colombian Caribbean occurs in a fairly restricted range in eastern Venezuela. These dolphins have not been previously reported in the Colombian Caribbean, likely because of a lack of study of the local cetacean fauna. We collected cetacean observations in waters of the Guajira Department, northern Colombia (~11°N, 73°W) during two separate efforts: (a) a seismic vessel survey (December 2009—March 2010), and (b) three coastal surveys from small boats (May—July 2012, May 2013, and May 2014). Here we document ten sightings of common dolphins collected during these surveys, which extend the known range of the species by ~1000 km into the southwestern Caribbean. We also collected nine skin biopsies in 2013 and 2014. In order to determine the taxonomic identity of the specimens, we conducted genetic barcoding and phylogenetic analyses using two mitochondrial markers, the Control Region (mtDNA) and Cytochrome b (Cytb). Results indicate that these specimens are genetically closer to the short-beaked common dolphin (Delphinus delphis) even though morphologically they resemble a long-beaked form (Delphinus sp.). However, the specific taxonomic status of common dolphins in the Caribbean and in the Western Atlantic remains unresolved. It is also unclear whether the distribution of the species between northern Colombia and eastern Venezuela is continuous or disjoined, or whether they can be considered part of the same stock.

Highlights

  • Common dolphins are widely distributed in all tropical and temperate oceans around the world

  • Morphological features that include body coloration, teeth number, vertebral number and the rostral length: zygomatic width ratio, and genetic comparisons between long-beaked and short beaked morphotypes using mitochondrial markers in the Eastern North Pacific established the long-beaked morphotype as D. capensis, a separate species from the short-beaked morphotype, D. delphis [1, 3]

  • We report a total of ten sightings of common dolphins (Delphinus sp.) (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Common dolphins (genus Delphinus) are widely distributed in all tropical and temperate oceans around the world. Details of their distribution are not well described because until 1994 all common dolphins were regarded as single species, D. delphis, despite knowledge of the existence of long-beaked and short-beaked morphotypes [1, 2]. Several phylogenetic studies have found that the two species are not reciprocally monophyletic when taking into account common dolphins from different ocean basin [4, 5, 8, 12, 13, 14], making Delphinus taxonomy unclear at the worldwide level. Genetic structure among populations has not been detected on each side of the Atlantic Ocean [4, 8, 15, 16].”

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