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Species Directory

Common Bottlenose Dolphin

Overview Conservation & Management Science Resources
Common bottlenose dolphins (referred to simply as bottlenose dolphins) are found throughout the world in both offshore and coastal waters. Learn more about bottlenose dolphins.

Common Bottlenose Dolphin

Tursiops truncatus

640x427-Dolphin_Bottlenose_NB_W.png

Protected Status

MMPA Protected
Throughout Its Range
MMPA Depleted
Western North Atlantic Northern Florida Coastal stock
Western North Atlantic Central Florida Coastal stock
Western North Atlantic Northern Migratory Coastal stock
Western North Atlantic South Carolina-Georgia Coastal stock
Western North Atlantic Southern Migratory Coastal stock
CITES Appendix II
Throughout Its Range
SPAW Annex II
Throughout the Wider Caribbean Region

Quick Facts

Weight
300 to 1,400 pounds
Length
6 to 13 feet
Lifespan
40 to 60 years
Threats
Biotoxins, Chemical contaminants, Disease, Fisheries entanglements and gear ingestion, Habitat alteration, Illegal feeding and harassment, Ocean noise, Oil spills and energy exploration, Vessel strikes
Region
New England/Mid-Atlantic, Pacific Islands, Southeast, West Coast
common-bottlenose-dolphin.jpg Common Bottlenose Dolphin. Credit: NOAA Fisheries

Common Bottlenose Dolphin. Credit: NOAA Fisheries

About the Species

common-bottlenose-dolphin.jpg Common Bottlenose Dolphin. Credit: NOAA Fisheries

Common Bottlenose Dolphin. Credit: NOAA Fisheries

Common bottlenose dolphins (referred to hereafter simply as bottlenose dolphins) are found throughout the world in both offshore and coastal waters, including harbors, bays, gulfs, and estuaries of temperate and tropical waters (estuaries are the areas where rivers meet the sea). They are one of the most well-studied marine mammals in the wild. In addition, they are easy to view in the wild because they live close to shore and are distributed throughout coastal and estuarine waters. But this puts bottlenose dolphins at increased risk of human-related injuries and death. They are a highly intelligent species and use sound both for communication and to hunt for food.

Bottlenose dolphins in the United States are not endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), but they are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA). They are vulnerable to many stressors and threats including bycatch in commercial and recreational fisheries, disease, biotoxins, pollution, habitat alteration including increased freshwater exposure, vessel strikes, illegal feeding and harassment, energy exploration and oil spills, and other types of human disturbance, such as underwater noise.

NOAA Fisheries helps conserve bottlenose dolphins through collaborative management, integrated science, partnerships, and outreach. Our scientists use a variety of innovative techniques to study, protect, and rescue bottlenose dolphins in distress (e.g., disentanglement response and strandings). We facilitate collaborative approaches to better understand and reduce harmful effects of human activities on bottlenose dolphins and their habitat based on sound science, conservation, public input, and public outreach.

Population Status

Like all marine mammals, bottlenose dolphins are protected under the MMPA. NOAA Fisheries estimates population size for each stock of bottlenose dolphins in U.S. waters in stock assessment reports. In all, 81 stocks of bottlenose dolphins have been identified in U.S. waters. Population trends for many of the U.S. stocks are unknown. Five stocks along the Atlantic Coast are considered depleted under the MMPA.

Appearance

Bottlenose dolphins get their name from their short, thick snout (or rostrum). They are generally gray in color. They can range from light gray to almost black on top near their dorsal fin and light gray to almost white on their belly. Bottlenose dolphins living in nearshore coastal waters are often smaller and lighter in color than those living offshore.

Behavior and Diet

Bottlenose dolphins may travel alone or in groups, and the groups often break apart and reform. Their travel is characterized by persistent movement in a consistent direction. Resting is often characterized by tight group formations, slow movement, and intervals of methodical breathing.

Social behavior includes breeding, playing, aggression, and gentle body contact, such as rubbing. Calves maintain what is called “baby position” while swimming. In this position, the calf has easy access to nursing and may gain benefits by reducing drag from swimming in its mom’s slip stream. When in baby position, the mom surfaces first, and the calf surfaces slightly after and just behind and to the side of its mother.

Bottlenose dolphins can thrive in many environments and feed on a variety of prey, such as fish, squid, and crustaceans (e.g., crabs and shrimp). They use different techniques to pursue and capture prey, searching for food individually or cooperatively. For example, they work together to herd fish into groups and then take turns charging through the school of fish to feed. Bottlenose dolphins may also trap schools of fish against sand bars and seawalls for an easy meal. They use passive listening and/or high frequency echolocation to locate prey.

Instead of using their teeth to chew, bottlenose dolphins grip fish with their teeth, then swallow the fish whole—head first—so the spines of the fish don't catch in their throats.

Where They Live

Bottlenose dolphins are found in temperate and tropical waters around the world. They inhabit a wide variety of habitats, including harbors, bays, gulfs, and estuaries, as well as nearshore coastal waters, deeper waters over the continental shelf, and even far offshore in the open ocean. In the United States, bottlenose dolphins are found along the West Coast off California, Oregon, and Washington; in the Hawaiian islands; along the East Coast from Massachusetts to Florida; throughout the Gulf of America, and in the Caribbean.

Bottlenose Dolphin Range.png World map providing approximate representation of the common bottlenose dolphin's range.

Lifespan & Reproduction

Bottlenose dolphins can live at least 40 years, with some females outliving males at 60 years or more. They generally begin to reproduce when they are between 5 and 15 years old, with the exact age varying by population. Female bottlenose dolphins can reach sexual maturity before males. Females are pregnant for about 12 months and give birth, on average, every 3 to 6 years. Once calves are born, they nurse for approximately 20 months and generally stay with their mothers for 3 to 6 years. Females as old as 45 have given birth.

Threats

Bottlenose dolphins are exposed to a variety of human-caused and natural threats and stressors. Some of the most pressing threats are discussed below.

Fisheries Interactions

One of the main threats to bottlenose dolphins is getting caught in fishing gear, known as bycatch. Bottlenose dolphins can become incidentally entangled, hooked, or otherwise captured in commercial fishing gear such as gillnets, seines, trawls, traps/pots, and longlines.

In addition to interactions with commercial fisheries, bottlenose dolphins may become entangled in or ingest rod-and-reel gear used by recreational anglers or for-hire fishing vessels, such as charter boats and headboats, which can lead to death or serious injury. This problem is increasing, especially in the southeastern United States and is largely the result of bottlenose dolphins taking bait and catch directly from fishing gear, eating discarded fish, or being fed fish (illegally) by humans, causing them to associate anglers with food. In addition, fishermen sometimes become frustrated when bottlenose dolphins take their catch and can retaliate with violence towards the dolphins.

Habitat Destruction and Degradation

Bottlenose dolphins living near shore are also susceptible to habitat destruction and degradation by contaminants and oil spills. For example, in areas with high levels of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) bottlenose dolphin’s immune systems can be negatively affected. Bottlenose dolphins in areas affected by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill were found to have an impaired stress response, lung disease, and reproductive failure, among other health conditions (PDF, 685 pages). In addition to chemical contamination, physical habitat alteration due to shoreline development and infrastructure projects, increased freshwater exposure and  freshwater diversion projects, and increased boat traffic are also of concern.

Biotoxins

Several bottlenose dolphin unusual mortality events (UMEs) have occurred in recent years, linked to harmful algal blooms (HABs), such as red tide. Several HABs (or several HAB-related die-offs) have been confirmed along the coast of Florida and others were suspected elsewhere in the Gulf of America. Bottlenose dolphins can be exposed to HAB toxins through the air or by eating contaminated prey. Biotoxin exposure can lead to both acute and more chronic health issues for bottlenose dolphins.

Illegal Harassment and Feeding Activities

Bottlenose dolphins are easy to view in the wild, but this also puts them at increased risk of human-related injuries and death. Feeding and attempting to feed bottlenose dolphins is not only illegal under the implementing regulations of the MMPA, but is harmful because it changes their behavior and reduces their wariness of people and vessels. They learn to associate humans with food and change their natural hunting practices by begging for handouts and taking bait/catch directly off fishing gear. Bottlenose dolphins, including calves, also learn these unnatural and risky feeding strategies from each other. Bottlenose dolphins are then more vulnerable to vessel strikes and to fishing gear entanglements and ingestion. They also may fall victim to extreme retaliatory acts, such as shooting, by frustrated boaters and fishermen.

Bottlenose dolphins may also be disturbed or harassed by the presence of humans and watercraft. Harassment is illegal under the MMPA and occurs when “any act of pursuit, torment, or annoyance has the potential to injure the animal or disrupt its behaviors." The implementing regulations of the MMPA further prohibit “the negligent or intentional operation of an aircraft or vessel, or the doing of any other negligent act which results in disturbing or molesting a marine mammal.” Any human-caused change to a bottlenose dolphin’s behavior may constitute disturbance or harassment. Long-term negative effects may include compromised health, reduced reproductive success, and displacement from or avoidance of important habitats.

Scientific Classification

Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Mammalia
Order Cetartiodactyla
Family Delphinidae
Genus Tursiops
Species truncatus

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/06/2025


What We Do

Conservation & Management

All bottlenose dolphins are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act. Some specific stocks in need of additional protections are designated as depleted or strategic. Our work supports the protection and conservation of bottlenose dolphins by:

  • Reducing bycatch in commercial fisheries and recreational fisheries
  • Minimizing harassment and illegal feeding
  • Responding to dead, injured, or entangled dolphins
  • Encouraging responsible viewing of wild dolphins
  • Minimizing the effects of vessel disturbance, noise, and other types of human impacts
Learn more about our conservation efforts

Science

NOAA Fisheries conducts research on the biology, behavior, and ecology of bottlenose dolphins to better inform management and policy. Examples include:

  • Undertaking stock assessments to determine the status of populations and/or sub-populations
  • Investigating unusual mortality events and strandings
  • Examining population structure, abundance, and dynamics using a variety of research techniques including photo-identification and genetics
  • Conducting natural resource damage assessments
Learn more about our research

How You Can Help

Icon with a fishing boat in background and a fishing line extending from the boat to a dolphin in the foreground

Prevent Rod-and-Reel Interactions

Serious and sometimes fatal dolphin injuries are on the rise from interactions with rod-and-reel fishing gear and boats. Here are some tips to prevent injuries to dolphins:

Never feed or attempt to feed wild dolphins or throw waste in the water.

Reuse or share leftover bait.

Reel in your line if dolphins are near.

Change locations if dolphins show interest in bait or catch.

Learn how to prevent injuries to dolphins when you are fishing

Keep your distance

Keep Your Distance

Be responsible when viewing marine life in the wild. Observe all dolphins and porpoises from a safe distance of at least 50 yards and limit your time spent observing to 30 minutes or less.

Learn more about our marine life viewing guidelines

Feeding Wildlife

Don't Feed Wild Dolphins

Dolphins fed by humans lose their natural wariness and learn to associate people with food, causing them to beg for handouts and take bait and catch directly from fishing gear. This puts them at risk from vessel strikes and becoming entangled in or ingesting fishing gear. Dolphins may teach these behaviors to their young, thereby putting them at risk.

More on protecting wild dolphins and admiring them from a distance 

Report a Violation

Report a Violation

Call the NOAA Fisheries Enforcement Hotline at (800) 853-1964 to report a federal marine resource violation. This hotline is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for anyone in the United States.

You may also contact your closest NOAA Office of Law Enforcement field office during regular business hours.

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Featured News

Stranded bottlenose dolphin in North Carolina marsh. Stranded bottlenose dolphin in North Carolina marsh. Credit: UNCW
Feature Story

North Carolina Dolphin Found With Head Missing

Southeast
Two dolphins leap out of the water. Common dolphins. Credit: NOAA Fisheries/Michelle Klein
Feature Story

Celebrating 15 Years of Surveying Protected Species in the Northwest Atlantic

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Dead bottlenose dolphin on the beach. Bottlenose dolphin. Credit: New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
Feature Story

Dead Dolphin Found with Missing Fins and Tail in Queens, New York

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Overcast day with mostly gray and silver tones. In the background at left, a line of 8 offshore windmills tower over the horizon. In the foreground, a small boat open-decked boat with a flat roof is silhouetted against a shining sea A small fishing vessel near wind turbines. Credit: Bob Brewer on Unsplash
Podcast

Studying Sound in the Ocean to Prepare for Offshore Wind Development

New England/Mid-Atlantic
National
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Related Species

Side-profile illustration of a spinner dolphin with a dark gray dorsal fin, light gray side, and white belly.

Spinner Dolphin

640x427-pantropical-spotted-dolphin.png

Pantropical Spotted Dolphin

640x427-short-beaked-common-dolphin.png

Short-Beaked Common Dolphin

640x427-frasers-dolphin.png

Fraser's Dolphin

Management Overview

The common bottlenose dolphin is protected throughout its range under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

The Western North Atlantic Northern Florida Coastal stock, Western North Atlantic Central Florida Coastal stock, Western North Atlantic Northern Migratory Coastal stock, Western North Atlantic South Carolina-Georgia Coastal stock, and the Western North Atlantic Southern Migratory Coastal stock are depleted under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

Thirty-eight stocks in the Gulf of America, western North Atlantic, and Puerto Rico/U.S. Virgin Islands are also listed as strategic under the Marine Mammal Protection Act. To learn which stocks are designated as depleted and strategic, review the stock assessment reports for the common bottlenose dolphin.

Additionally, the common bottlenose dolphin is listed under:

  • Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) 
  • Annex II of the Protocol for Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife (SPAW)

Although bottlenose dolphins live along the coast throughout the United States, our conservation and management work primarily focuses on the Gulf of 
America and the western North Atlantic. Many stocks in these areas are listed as depleted and strategic and are exposed to numerous threats.

Image
Two bottlenose dolphins swimming and jumping through the air.
Pair of common bottlenose dolphins. Credit: NOAA Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center/Lisa Morse

Conservation Efforts

Reducing Interactions with Fishing Gear

Bycatch in fishing gear is a leading cause of common bottlenose dolphin deaths and injuries. To reduce deaths and serious injuries of bottlenose dolphins from certain commercial fisheries in the western North Atlantic, NOAA Fisheries implemented the Bottlenose Dolphin Take Reduction Plan. Representatives from NOAA Fisheries, the fishing industry, regional fishery management councils, state and federal resource management agencies, the scientific community, and conservation organizations worked together to develop the plan. The plan includes gillnet regulations, such as seasonal gillnet restrictions, gear proximity requirements, and gear length restrictions. It also requires the use of modified pound net leaders for offshore Virginia pound nets in specified waters of the lower mainstem Chesapeake Bay and coastal state waters.

Learn more about bycatch and fisheries interactions

Reducing Rod-and-Reel Interactions

Interactions between bottlenose dolphins and rod-and-reel fishing gear used by recreational anglers are increasing. Bottlenose dolphins can be injured or killed by entanglement in or ingestion of the gear or may fall victim to retaliation from frustrated boaters and fishermen. NOAA Fisheries is working to better understand and characterize the frequency, geographic extent, and magnitude of these interactions. We are also working with researchers to identify and evaluate ways to safely and effectively reduce the potential for these interactions.

Minimizing Harassment and Illegal Feeding

As human interactions with wild bottlenose dolphins increase, so does the risk of disturbing or injuring these animals. NOAA Fisheries provides guidance on how to safely and responsibly view bottlenose dolphins, including the following initiatives:

  • Protect Dolphins Campaign
  • Don’t Feed Wild Dolphins

Learn more about the rules regarding feeding and harassing marine mammals in the wild

Addressing Ocean Noise

Sound pollution threatens bottlenose dolphin populations by interrupting their normal behavior and driving them away from areas important to their survival. Increasing evidence suggests that exposure to intense underwater sound in some settings may cause some marine mammals, including bottlenose dolphins, to strand and ultimately die.

NOAA Fisheries is investigating all aspects of acoustic communication and hearing in marine animals, as well as the effects of sound on bottlenose dolphin behavior and hearing. In 2018, we issued updated marine mammal acoustic technical guidance for assessing the effects of anthropogenic sound on marine mammal hearing.

Learn more about ocean noise

Overseeing Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response

We work with volunteer networks in all coastal states to respond to marine mammal strandings including all dolphins and porpoises. When stranded animals are found alive, NOAA Fisheries and our partners assess the animal’s health and determine the best course of action. When stranded animals are found dead, our scientists work to understand and investigate the cause of death. Although the cause often remains unknown, scientists can sometimes attribute strandings to disease, harmful algal blooms, vessel strikes, fishing gear entanglements, pollution exposure, and underwater noise. Some strandings can serve as indicators of ocean health, giving insight into larger environmental issues that may also have implications for human health and welfare.

Learn more about the Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response Program

Marine Mammal Unusual Mortality Events

Bottlenose dolphins have experienced multiple unusual mortality events (UMEs) in the past. Under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, a UME is defined as “a stranding that is unexpected; involves a significant die-off of any marine mammal population; and demands immediate response.” To understand the health of marine mammal populations, scientists study unusual mortality events.

Get information on active and past UMEs

Get an overview of marine mammal UMEs

Implementing the Dolphin-Safe/Tuna Tracking and Verification Program

Bottlenose dolphins, like other marine mammals, may become bycatch in fisheries. Some species of tuna are known to aggregate beneath schools of certain dolphin species. In some parts of the world, this close association led to the fishing practice of encircling a dolphin school to capture the tuna concentrated below, to the detriment of the dolphins, which often get entangled in the net. The Dolphin Protection Consumer Information Act established a national tuna tracking program to ensure that tuna imported into the United States meets certain requirements to ensure the safety of dolphins during tuna fishing operations.

Learn more about the Dolphin-Safe/Tuna Tracking and Verification Program


Key Actions and Documents

Incidental Take

Incidental Take Authorization: University of Texas at Austin's Marine Geophysical Survey in the Northwest Gulf of Mexico

Incidental Take Authorization: University of Texas at Austin's Marine Geophysical Survey in the Northwest Gulf of Mexico
  • Notice of Final IHA
  • Notice of Proposed IHA
Notice,
Southeast
Effective
01/13/2025

Incidental Take Authorization: Scripps Institution of Oceanography's Marine Geophysical Survey in the Nauru Basin of Greater Micronesia in the NW

Incidental Take Authorization: Scripps Institution of Oceanography's Marine Geophysical Survey in the Nauru Basin of Greater Micronesia in the NW Pacific Ocean
  • Notice of Final IHA
  • Notice of Proposed IHA
Notice,
International
Effective
12/11/2024

Incidental Take Authorization: Bay State Wind, LLC Marine Site Characterization Surveys off Rhode Island and Massachusetts

Incidental Take Authorization: Bay State Wind, LLC Marine Site Characterization Surveys off Rhode Island and Massachusetts
  • Notice of Proposed Modification IHA
  • Notice of Final IHA
  • Notice of Proposed IHA
Notice,
New England/Mid-Atlantic
Published
12/10/2024

Incidental Take Authorization: Washington Department of Transportation's Seattle Slip 3 Vehicle Transfer Span Project off of Seattle, Washington

Incidental Take Authorization: Washington Department of Transportation's Seattle Slip 3 Vehicle Transfer Span Project off of Seattle, Washington
  • Notice of Final IHA
  • Notice of Proposed IHA
Notice,
West Coast
Effective
09/12/2024
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More Information

  • Marine Life Viewing Guidelines
  • Marine Life in Distress
  • Marine Mammal Permits and Authorizations
  • International Marine Mammal Conservation
  • How to Report Strandings

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/06/2025

Science Overview

NOAA Fisheries is committed to understanding the impacts of human activities on the biology and behavior of bottlenose dolphins. From population dynamics to the detection and monitoring of unusual mortality events, we are undertaking a range of studies to further our understanding of these animals.

Although bottlenose dolphins live off the coast throughout the United States, our research primarily focuses on stocks in the Gulf of America and the western North Atlantic.

Image
Aerial view of a group of bottlenose dolphins swimming.
Bottlenose dolphin group with two calves. Credit: NOAA Northeast Fisheries Science Center/Allison Henry

Long-Term Studies of Estuarine Dolphins

Observational studies using photo-identification and other techniques play a key role in helping NOAA Fisheries understand the behavior and population dynamics of estuarine bottlenose dolphins and the threats they face. For example, The Sarasota Dolphin Research Program is the longest-running observational study of wild marine mammals in the world. Scientists have been collecting observational and photographic data from bottlenose dolphins in Sarasota Bay, Florida, continually for more than 50 years. Researchers from a range of fields—physiology, ecology, behavior, acoustics, genetics, and population dynamics—have used a variety of research methods to greatly increase our understanding of wild dolphin populations. With this information, we can better understand how to conserve and protect these marine mammals.

Damage Assessments

Understanding the effects of incidents such as oil spills is critical to predicting their long-term effect on wild bottlenose dolphin populations. For example, in response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, NOAA and local, state, and federal partners started the Barataria Bay, Louisiana, bottlenose dolphin study in 2010 as part of the Natural Resource Damage Assessment. A team of scientists reported a high rate of reproductive failure, among other things, in bottlenose dolphins exposed to oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill, having monitored bottlenose dolphins in Barataria Bay for 5 years. These insights provide a greater understanding of the challenges that wild dolphins face in Barataria Bay and elsewhere in the Gulf of America and throughout the United States.

Acoustic Science

Our research also is focused on acoustics—the physics of the properties of sound. We study the basic acoustic behavior of cetaceans and fish, mapping the acoustic environment and finding better ways to find cetaceans and their prey using acoustic technologies.

Learn more about acoustics science

Shipboard and Aerial Studies

NOAA Fisheries conducts research cruises and aerial surveys to collect information on bottlenose dolphins’ habitat preferences, feeding ecology, and distribution. Sea- and airborne surveys  help us estimate the abundance of bottlenose dolphins in coastal and offshore waters, and study distribution shifts and trends over time. 

Genetic Studies

Genetic sampling is used to study population structure, health, and prey preference. This type of information helps to better understand habitat use, population demographics, and the boundaries between different populations, which in turn helps to inform decisions for marine mammal management, conservation, and restoration planning to help protect these animals. Genetic sampling is also used to identify different species of bottlenose dolphin. For example, along the U.S. East Coast, two ecotypes of bottlenose dolphin are found, a coastal and an offshore form, and a recent study that incorporated both genetic and morphological data revealed that these two ecotypes in this area are separate species. The offshore form is the common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) and the coastal form is Tamenend’s bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops erebennus). In the western North Atlantic, the common bottlenose dolphin is found in deeper waters of the continental shelf break and beyond, and Tamenend’s bottlenose dolphin is found in nearshore coastal and estuarine waters from New York to Florida. The range extent of Tamenend’s bottlenose dolphin onto the continental shelf in the western North Atlantic, and beyond these waters (e.g., Gulf of America, Caribbean, and Bahamian waters) is not well-understood.

Stock Assessments

Determining the size of bottlenose dolphin populations helps resource managers determine the success of our conservation measures. NOAA Fisheries scientists collect population information from various sources and present the data in an annual stock assessment report.

As resources allow, NOAA Fisheries is also working with collaborators to update stock assessment reports for bays, sounds, and estuaries (BSEs) in the Gulf of America and the western North Atlantic. In the past 5 years, abundance studies were performed in several BSEs throughout the Gulf of America, including those in Louisiana,  Alabama, and Florida.

Research & Data

Common Bottlenose Dolphin Ecotypes of the Western North Atlantic Revisited

Research proposing the recognition of a distinct species of coastal bottlenose dolphin.
March 15, 2024 - Peer-Reviewed Research ,
New England/Mid-Atlantic
Southeast

Marine Mammal Photo-Identification Research in the Southeast

We use photos to identify, catalog, and study marine mammals in the Southeast. These photos provide important information about the health, social structure, abundance, and distribution of marine mammal populations.
Southeast

Common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) abundance and distribution patterns in St Andrew Bay, Florida, USA

The goals of this study were to conduct photographic‐identification surveys during 2015 and 2016 to determine abundance, distribution, and site fidelity of common bottlenose dolphins in the St Andrew Bay Bays, Sounds and Estuary (BSE) Stock over four primary periods (July and October 2015, and April and October 2016).
January 08, 2024 - Peer-Reviewed Research ,
Southeast

Population Consequences of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill on Pelagic Cetaceans

We quantified population consequences for pelagic cetaceans, including sperm whales, beaked whales, and 11 species of delphinids.
December 11, 2023 - Peer-Reviewed Research ,
Southeast
View More

More Information

  • Review of historical unusual mortality events (UMEs) in the Gulf of Mexico (199…
  • Marine Mammal Permits and Authorizations
  • Cetacean Unusual Mortality Event in Northern Gulf of Mexico Investigation Resul…

Recent Science Blogs

Survey

A Shift in Our Mission and an Unexpected Visitor

Survey
The head of a white bird, with a black face and long, pointy yellow/orange bill. Nazca booby bill closeup. Credit: Terra Mar Applied Sciences/Kate Sutherland
Survey

Surprising Sights and Wondrous Wildlife in the Gulf of Maine

Survey
wo commercial fishermen wearing foul weather gear, blue rubber gloves, and baseball hats smile ear-to-ear while one holds a large golden tilefish. The golden tilefish has a white underside and its dorsal side, head, and dorsal fin are flecked with yellow and gold tones. Captain Phil Lynch and mate Danny DeRose proudly displaying a golden tilefish they caught onboard the F/V Mary Elizabeth. Credit: NOAA Fisheries/Jacob Wilson
Survey

An Abundance of Dolphins and a Rare Bird

Survey
A small gray-colored dolphin with a lighter-colored belly in mid-leap pit of the water. Clymene dolphin photographed from the NOAA Ship Henry B. Bigelow on June 25, 2021. Credit: NOAA Fisheries/Felipe Triana.
View More

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/06/2025

Documents

Document

Photo-identification capture-mark-recapture techniques for estimating abundance of bay, sound and estuary populations of Bottlenose dolphins along the U.S. East Coast and Gulf of Mexico, a workshop report

The workshop sought to develop agreed upon best practices for fieldwork, photo processing and…

Southeast
Document

Report to Congress: Interactions between Bottlenose Dolphins and Sharks and Commercial, For-Hire, and Private Recreational Fisheries in the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic

Report to Congress on interactions between bottlenose dolphins and sharks and fisheries in the Gulf…

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Southeast
Document

Predicting the effects of low salinity associated with the Mid-Barataria Sediment Diversion project on resident common bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) in Barataria Bay, Louisiana

Describes the development and application of the model that projects the impacts of exposure to low…

Southeast
Document

An Updated Literature Review Examining the Impacts of Tourism on Marine Mammals over the Last Fifteen Years (2000-2015) to Inform Research and Management Programs

In 2000, Samuels et al. provided a comprehensive review of the scientific literature available at…

Southeast
More Documents

Data & Maps

Map

2019 Bottlenose Dolphin Northern Gulf of Mexico Unusual Mortality Event Dead Animal Locations

Southeast
Map

Bottlenose Dolphin Take Reduction Plan Map & GIS Data for New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Southeast
Map

Bottlenose Dolphin Take Reduction Plan Map & GIS Data for Northern and Southern Virginia

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Southeast
Map

Bottlenose Dolphin Take Reduction Plan Map & GIS Data for Northern North Carolina

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Southeast
More Data
More Maps

Research

Peer-Reviewed Research

Common Bottlenose Dolphin Ecotypes of the Western North Atlantic Revisited

Research proposing the recognition of a distinct species of coastal bottlenose dolphin.

New England/Mid-Atlantic
Southeast

Marine Mammal Photo-Identification Research in the Southeast

We use photos to identify, catalog, and study marine mammals in the Southeast. These photos provide important information about the health, social structure, abundance, and distribution of marine mammal populations.

Southeast
Peer-Reviewed Research

Common bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) abundance and distribution patterns in St Andrew Bay, Florida, USA

The goals of this study were to conduct photographic‐identification surveys during 2015 and 2016 to…

Southeast
Peer-Reviewed Research

Population Consequences of the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill on Pelagic Cetaceans

We quantified population consequences for pelagic cetaceans, including sperm whales, beaked whales,…

Southeast
More Research

Outreach & Education

Outreach Materials

Protected Marine Species Identification Guide Southeast United States

This guide is intended for use by mariners in the identification and reporting of threatened and…

Southeast
Outreach Materials

Dolphin Friendly Fishing Tips Sign

This sign is often posted near boat ramps, piers, docks, marinas, and waterfront parks.

Southeast
Outreach Materials

Protect Wild Dolphins Sign

This sign is often posted near boat ramps, piers, docks, marinas, and waterfront parks.

Southeast
Outreach Materials

Don't Feed Wild Dolphin Sign

This sign is often posted near boat ramps, piers, docks, marinas, and waterfront parks.

Southeast
More Outreach Materials
More Educational Materials

Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 03/06/2025

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