Albuquerque Journal

A LIFE AMONG THE DOLPHINS

For 50 years, biologist has studied marine mammals off Florida’s Gulf Coast

- BY STEVE JOHNSON

CHICAGO – Beginning his work in marine biology, Randy Wells thought he was a shark guy. But the teenager whose family had just moved from Peoria, Illinois, to Florida’s Gulf Coast volunteere­d to help a local researcher study the migration patterns of the bottlenose dolphins off Sarasota.

And now it’s 50 years later and Wells — a staff scientist at Brookfield Zoo in suburban Chicago since 1989 — heads the world’s longest-running study of a marine mammal population in the wild, tracking the lives, loves and losses of about 170 Sarasota Bay dolphins and delivering globally significan­t insight into these creatures, which have long fascinated humans.

In the process, Wells has become one of the best-known dolphin experts on the planet — and helped make Brookfield more than just a landlocked zoo in a sleepy suburb.

But the essence of what he has learned, Wells says, is not that different from life in a Chicago suburb.

“So when we started, we had no idea what we were going to find back in 1970. It was completely explorator­y, with a pilot tagging study back then, and it could have gone a variety of directions. But the idea that we could find the same identifiab­le individual dolphins time and time again within a fairly limited area set the stage for everything we’ve been able to do since then.

“So we can recognize 95 percent of the dolphins in Sarasota waters just from looking at their dorsal fin, looking for patterns of nicks and notches on their fins. Within that 170-dolphin community, we have been monitoring them through six generation­s. At any given time, we can have up to five concurrent generation­s within a lineage.

“So it’s very much like a suburban neighborho­od outside of Chicago. For example, I lived in LaGrange Park for a few years, and in the neighborho­od that I lived in, there were multiple generation­s of the same family on back-to-back streets. And that’s kind of how I envision what’s going on in Sarasota.”

That explanatio­n is true enough, but it doesn’t capture the breadth of work that Wells and scores of colleagues and visiting scientists have been able to do over the years from their headquarte­rs on Sarasota Bay.

After first establishi­ng the crucial fact that the wild dolphin population was resident, rather than transitory, Wells and what is now called the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program have helped prove the damage to dolphins and the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem caused by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill, spotlighte­d the impact of red tide events, pioneered techniques in health assessment of dolphins and establishe­d that dolphins can live to age 67 and give birth up to age 48.

“Scotchgard, which we used to put on couches?” said Stuart Strahl, president and CEO of Chicago Zoological Society, the parent organizati­on of Brookfield Zoo. “One of the reasons that’s off the shelves now, it’s a bioaccumul­ator like DDT.” The original formulatio­n of the 3M product, “that’s off the shelves because of Randy’s research, because of what he found in the dolphins.”

The list of SDRP impacts Brookfield has compiled to mark the 50th anniversar­y, which happened officially in October, is remarkable for their length and detail, but it would be wrong to think of the program as all white lab coats and clipboards.

“Randy and his crew, they’re the most prolific scientists I’ve ever met,” said Strahl, who has a research background himself. “They are some of the most remarkable humans I’ve seen in the field, and the enthusiasm they have when they see a dolphin they haven’t seen in a while is terrific. ‘That must be so and so!’ It’s infectious when you’re around them.”

And the reason for Brookfeild to continue supporting the program — to the tune of almost $1 million annually, primarily through grants and philanthro­py, the zoo says — is because it complement­s the work done on the zoo campus.

“We have an obligation to engage people in not just the animals that we have on display but also to learn their stories and learn the stories of what things they face in the wild and how those issues can be mitigated,” Strahl said. “It’s two halves of a solution for wildlife.”

Brookfield support is crucial to the project, pointed out Peter Tyack, a professor at University of St Andrews in Scotland who studies cetacean vocalizing and has done research on the Sarasota dolphins.

“Having reliable continuous support is what’s essential for this kind of long-term study,” Tyack said.

And having so much data over so long a time is essential to understand­ing the big problems of today, including the effects of climate change, Tyack said. “What I say about Randy’s project is … the older the data, the more valuable it gets to us today in terms of tracking longterm trends.”

Wells turned 67 in November, but he said he doesn’t see himself retiring anytime soon.

“It is both my job and my hobby,” he said. “I love being around the water. I love being on the water. And even if I’m just out kayaking, it just adds that much more when there’s a dolphin around, So I don’t envision myself stopping completely being interested in the lives of these animals and what I can do to help them.”

 ?? CHICAGO ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY ?? A resident Sarasota Bay, Fla., dolphin leaping with suction-cup-mounted DTAG that records sounds and behavior for up to 24 hours. As many as six generation­s live in the same community of 170 dolphins, scientists say. Dolphins can live to age 67 and give birth up to age 48.
CHICAGO ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY A resident Sarasota Bay, Fla., dolphin leaping with suction-cup-mounted DTAG that records sounds and behavior for up to 24 hours. As many as six generation­s live in the same community of 170 dolphins, scientists say. Dolphins can live to age 67 and give birth up to age 48.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States