ON
← Back to feed
Scientists track Istanbul's resident dolphins for 30 years
TR🏛️ Politics17 hr. ago

Scientists track Istanbul's resident dolphins for 30 years

Scientists from the Turkish Marine Research Foundation (TÜDAV) and academic institutions have been monitoring bottlenose dolphins in the Bosporus and Marmara Sea for nearly 30 years as part of broader ecological research. They use methods such as identifying individual dolphins by their dorsal fin markings and passive acoustic monitoring to study their behavior and migration patterns. Three dolphin species are present in the area, but only bottlenose dolphins form a resident population, with estimates suggesting around 40 individuals live in the region, increasing to up to 200 during seasonal fish migrations. Researchers highlight dolphins as indicator species for ecosystem health and warn of ongoing threats like pollution, overfishing, and disturbance from recreational activities such as jet skiing. The study, supported by TÜBITAK, aims to continue until 2030 to inform future conservation strategies.

1 reports

Daily Sabah logoDaily SabahParty-alignedCenter17 hr. ago
Scientists track Istanbul's resident dolphins for 30 years

Scientists from the Turkish Marine Research Foundation (TÜDAV) and academic institutions have been monitoring bottlenose dolphins in the Bosporus and Marmara Sea for nearly 30 years as part of broader ecological research. They use methods such as identifying individual dolphins by their dorsal fin markings and passive acoustic monitoring to study their behavior and migration patterns. Three dolphin species are present in the area, but only bottlenose dolphins form a resident population, with estimates suggesting around 40 individuals live in the region, increasing to up to 200 during seasonal fish migrations. Researchers highlight dolphins as indicator species for ecosystem health and warn of ongoing threats like pollution, overfishing, and disturbance from recreational activities such as jet skiing. The study, supported by TÜBITAK, aims to continue until 2030 to inform future conservation strategies.

Bias read (Center): The article presents scientific research on dolphin populations and environmental impacts without overt ideological framing. While it discusses concerns about pollution and human activity affecting ecosystems, it does not take a partisan stance or emphasize specific political agendas. The focus is学术

Keep the news honest.

ObjectiveNews is reader-funded and ad-free — we show you the bias instead of hiding it. Support independent journalism for €5/month.

Become a Supporter

Related stories