Western North Atlantic Coastal Stock STOCK DEFINITION AND GEOGRAPHIC RANGE Stock Structure of the Coastal Morphotype

A. Latitudinal distribution and structure along the coast The coastal morphotype is continuously distributed along the Atlantic coast south of Long Island, around peninsula Florida and along the Gulf of Mexico coast. On the basis of differences in mtDNA haplotype frequencies, however, Curry (1997) c...

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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.294.8703
http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/pr/pdfs/sars/ao2002dobn-wnco.pdf
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Summary:A. Latitudinal distribution and structure along the coast The coastal morphotype is continuously distributed along the Atlantic coast south of Long Island, around peninsula Florida and along the Gulf of Mexico coast. On the basis of differences in mtDNA haplotype frequencies, however, Curry (1997) concluded that the nearshore animals in the northern Gulf of Mexico and the western North Atlantic were significantly different and represent separate stocks. Within the western North Atlantic, the stock structure of coastal bottlenose dolphins is complex. Scott et al. (1988) hypothesized a single coastal migratory stock ranging seasonally from as far north as Long Island, NY, to as far south as central Florida, citing stranding patterns during a high mortality event in 1987-88 and observed density patterns along the US Atlantic coast. The continuous distribution of dolphins along the coast seemed to support this hypothesis. It was recognized that bottlenose dolphins were resident in some estuaries; these were considered to be separate from the coastal migratory animals. More recent studies suggest that the single coastal migratory stock hypothesis is incorrect and that there is likely a complex mosaic of stocks. For example, year-round resident populations have been reported at a variety of sites in the southern part of the range, from Charleston, South Carolina (Zolman 1996) to central Florida (Odell and Asper 1990); seasonal residents and migratory or transient animals also occur in these areas (summarized in Hohn 1997). In the northern part of the range the patterns reported include seasonal residency, year-round residency with large home ranges, and migratory or transient movements (Barco and Swingle 1996, Sayigh et al. 1997). Communities of dolphins have been recognized in embayments and