‘Scavenger’ dolphins increasingly rely on trawlers for food in overfished Adriatic, say scientists

Bottlenose dolphins in the Adriatic are increasingly following trawlers to scavenge for food, with baby dolphins learning the technique from their parents, a study has found.
“These days the easiest way to find [bottlenose dolphins] is to look for trawlers,” said Giovanni Bearzi, a co-author of the study and the president of Dolphin Biology and Conservation in Italy. “Many of them are followed by the dolphins that go to forage and scavenge in their wake.
“When I say scavenge, I mean that they also feed on discards and unwanted organisms. Dolphins are following the trawlers because natural prey is very hard to find. Why is it hard to find? It’s overfished.
“The Mediterranean Sea is one of the areas with the highest rates of fishing worldwide. The fishing pressure in the Mediterranean is twice the level considered sustainable by the FAO [UN Food and Agriculture Organization].”
The scientists monitored trawlers offshore in the Adriatic for 148 days, carrying out 859 inspections across two regions and different types of trawlers.
Dolphins have always followed fishing boats, but the researchers said the behaviour seemed to have increased in intensity. A study from the Adriatic in the 1990s found that 10% of trawlers were followed by dolphins, but in the recent study, in one area 76% of trawlers were followed.
Many animals with depleted prey start pursuing food near humans, such as polar bears scavenging in rubbish dumps, according to the study. Trawlers could represent a simple source of food in an impoverished ecosystem.
Although dolphins are highly opportunistic animals and may have learned that it is easier for them to catch fish in the wake of a trawler, this does not mean that it is advantageous.
Dr Randall Reeves, one of the authors of the study and chair of the Committee of Scientific Advisors at the US Marine Mammal Commission, said: “It is known that bottlenose dolphins are occasionally injured or killed by trawl gear, and that foraging behind trawlers can affect dolphins’ diet, social organisation and communication.
“Dolphins may also suffer hearing damage that results from chronic exposure to the noise of trawlers. However, finding sufficient prey away from trawlers in an overfished sea may be too difficult. It appears that for these animals, taking the risks is better than going hungry.”
Bearzi added: “The baby dolphins follow the trawlers with their mothers, watch the adults foraging and learn that kind of behaviour. It is transmitted culturally.”
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The Adriatic ecosystem used to include many more common dolphins. “The common dolphins are not common any more,” Bearzi said. “Except for a very few hotspots in the Adriatic, they have virtually vanished. One species has gone and that is not a good sign. It’s a warning sign.”
The scientists are calling for action to protect a rich diversity of species, and advise against continued use of trawlers, to protect dolphins and conserve marine biodiversity.
Bearzi said: “When I was younger, I just wanted to study the behaviour of dolphins. I wouldn’t even think about human encroachment back then. But what we saw [in past research] is entire communities of dolphins disappearing. If you stop destructive fishing, the marine resources would bloom very quickly. Dolphins would be able to feed again on their natural prey, as they did for centuries in this same area.
“Fish less. Fish in less destructive ways. This is really the message.”
The study, Bottlenose Dolphin Reliance on Trawlers in Prey-depleted Adriatic Sea Regions, published in Frontiers, was carried out by Bearzi along with Silvia Bonizzoni, Nathan B Furey and Randall R Reeves, a group of researchers who have studied the behaviour of dolphins in the Mediterranean for decades
Read the full story at The Guardian ↗
Bottlenose dolphins in the Adriatic Sea have increasingly adopted scavenging behaviour around commercial trawlers as their natural food sources have depleted due to overfishing. Researchers monitored trawlers across 148 days and found that in some areas, 76% were followed by dolphins, compared to 10% in 1990s studies. Young dolphins learn this foraging technique by observing their parents. The Mediterranean experiences fishing pressure at twice the level the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization considers sustainable. While dolphins have historically followed fishing vessels, researchers note this behaviour now reflects ecological necessity rather than preference. The practice carries documented risks including injury from fishing gear, hearing damage from vessel noise, and altered social structures and communication patterns. However, scientists suggest that in an overfished ecosystem, accessing trawler discards may be preferable to attempting to find sufficient natural prey. The researchers call for reduced and less destructive fishing practices to restore marine ecosystems and allow dolphins to return to natural feeding patterns.
Read the full story at The Guardian ↗
Bottlenose dolphins in the Adriatic are increasingly following trawlers to scavenge for food, with baby dolphins learning the technique from their parents, a study has found.
“These days the easiest way to find [bottlenose dolphins] is to look for trawlers,” said Giovanni Bearzi, a co-author of the study and the president of Dolphin Biology and Conservation in Italy. “Many of them are followed by the dolphins that go to forage and scavenge in their wake.
“When I say scavenge, I mean that they also feed on discards and unwanted organisms. Dolphins are following the trawlers because natural prey is very hard to find. Why is it hard to find? It’s overfished.
“The Mediterranean Sea is one of the areas with the highest rates of fishing worldwide. The fishing pressure in the Mediterranean is twice the level considered sustainable by the FAO [UN Food and Agriculture Organization].”
The scientists monitored trawlers offshore in the Adriatic for 148 days, carrying out 859 inspections across two regions and different types of trawlers.
Dolphins have always followed fishing boats, but the researchers said the behaviour seemed to have increased in intensity. A study from the Adriatic in the 1990s found that 10% of trawlers were followed by dolphins, but in the recent study, in one area 76% of trawlers were followed.
Many animals with depleted prey start pursuing food near humans, such as polar bears scavenging in rubbish dumps, according to the study. Trawlers could represent a simple source of food in an impoverished ecosystem.
Although dolphins are highly opportunistic animals and may have learned that it is easier for them to catch fish in the wake of a trawler, this does not mean that it is advantageous.
Dr Randall Reeves, one of the authors of the study and chair of the Committee of Scientific Advisors at the US Marine Mammal Commission, said: “It is known that bottlenose dolphins are occasionally injured or killed by trawl gear, and that foraging behind trawlers can affect dolphins’ diet, social organisation and communication.
“Dolphins may also suffer hearing damage that results from chronic exposure to the noise of trawlers. However, finding sufficient prey away from trawlers in an overfished sea may be too difficult. It appears that for these animals, taking the risks is better than going hungry.”
Bearzi added: “The baby dolphins follow the trawlers with their mothers, watch the adults foraging and learn that kind of behaviour. It is transmitted culturally.”
after newsletter promotion
The Adriatic ecosystem used to include many more common dolphins. “The common dolphins are not common any more,” Bearzi said. “Except for a very few hotspots in the Adriatic, they have virtually vanished. One species has gone and that is not a good sign. It’s a warning sign.”
The scientists are calling for action to protect a rich diversity of species, and advise against continued use of trawlers, to protect dolphins and conserve marine biodiversity.
Bearzi said: “When I was younger, I just wanted to study the behaviour of dolphins. I wouldn’t even think about human encroachment back then. But what we saw [in past research] is entire communities of dolphins disappearing. If you stop destructive fishing, the marine resources would bloom very quickly. Dolphins would be able to feed again on their natural prey, as they did for centuries in this same area.
“Fish less. Fish in less destructive ways. This is really the message.”
The study, Bottlenose Dolphin Reliance on Trawlers in Prey-depleted Adriatic Sea Regions, published in Frontiers, was carried out by Bearzi along with Silvia Bonizzoni, Nathan B Furey and Randall R Reeves, a group of researchers who have studied the behaviour of dolphins in the Mediterranean for decades
Read the full story at The Guardian ↗
Bottlenose dolphins in the Adriatic are increasingly following trawlers to scavenge for food, including fish discards and unwanted organisms A 1990s study found 10% of trawlers were followed by dolphins; a recent study found 76% were followed in one area Young dolphins learn trawler-following behaviour from their parents The Mediterranean Sea experiences fishing pressure at twice the level considered sustainable by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization Dolphins can be injured or killed by trawl gear and suffer hearing damage from chronic exposure to trawler noise Dolphins' diet, social organisation and communication can be affected by foraging behind trawlers Natural prey is very hard to find due to overfishing in the region For these animals, taking the risks of trawler-following is better than going hungry The disappearance of common dolphins from the Adriatic is a warning sign of ecosystem degradation If destructive fishing were stopped, marine resources would recover quickly
Read the full story at The Guardian ↗
- Bottlenose dolphins in the Adriatic increasingly follow trawlers to scavenge food, with the practice intensifying from 10% of trawlers followed in the 1990s to 76% in recent research
- Overfishing has depleted natural prey, making trawler scraps easier to access than wild fish; young dolphins learn this behaviour from parents
- The behaviour carries risks including injury from trawl gear, hearing damage, and dietary disruption, but researchers suggest dolphins face a choice between these dangers and insufficient food