Southern Tides November 2021

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DNR Rescues Entangled Dolphin

By Rick Lavender Communications and Outreach Specialist GADNR Wildlife Resources Division

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orth Atlantic right whales entangled in commercial fishing gear is a familiar headline. But DNR staff also deal with a lesserknown entanglement: bottlenose dolphins caught in crab trap buoy lines. While involving a much more common species and on a much smaller scale, these incidents can still mean life or death for the animal. Or in a case this summer, an adult dolphin and her calf. Alerted by DNR Range Safety Officer Kevin Michaud to a dolphin in trouble near Richmond Hill Aug. 4, senior wildlife biologist Clay George and crew arrived to find the buoy rope of a trap wrapped tightly around the dolphin’s tail. With the weight of the trap pulling her under, she struggled to surface and breathe. Most dolphin entanglements are straightforward. Not this one. “She had managed to roll and twist over 20 feet of rope around her tail,” George said. Complicating matters, dolphins can die suddenly from the stress of being entangled. The quicker they’re released, the better. And this dolphin had a calf close by, one too young to survive alone. The four-person team (Mark Dodd, Clay George, Ashley Raybould, and Trip Kolkmeyer) followed a basic plan. Snag the line. Control the tail. Loosen and determine where to cut the rope – fast. Slice carefully. All while hanging onto a thrashing 300-pound mass of muscle. It worked. The dolphin swam away rope-free and her calf quickly joined her. “It’s the second case I can think of where we disentangled a mom while its calf swam around nearby,” George said. Why dolphins get entangled is not clear. Some may be trying to steal the trap bait or playing with the rope or buoy, or maybe they're accidently caught as they swim past. While not common, entanglement also isn’t a freak occurrence. The Aug. 4 incident was the third crab-trap entanglement reported in Georgia this year and the only one that did not end in death. DNR has documented 29 confirmed and suspected entanglements since 2000. Of those, 43 percent of the dolphins died. Fortunately, this dolphin had not been entangled long. When the crabber had checked the trap that morning, she wasn’t there.

Top: Wildlife biologist Mark Dodd brings the entangled dolphin alongside the boat. Above: Care must taken to prevent the dolphin from developing Capture Myopathy, when muscle damage is incurred as a result of extreme exertion, struggle or stress.

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