Skip to content
All news
  • All news
  • About whales & dolphins
  • Corporates
  • Create healthy seas
  • End captivity
  • Green Whale
  • Prevent deaths in nets
  • Scottish Dolphin Centre
  • Stop whaling
  • Stranding
  • Whale watching
Vaquita. Photo Thomas Jefferson

Scientific Committee gives first ever official species extinction warning

Photo: Thomas Jefferson We have welcomed the urgent call by experts to protect the vaquita...
blue whale

Whale fossil from Peru may have been heavier than blue whale

Scientists examining the bones of a 39 million-year-old ancient whale have concluded that it may...
Humpback whale © Christopher Swann

Humpback whales breach in synchronisation

Humpback whales are renowned for their incredible acrobatic displays, but a family in the USA...
Long-finned pilot whale

Unusual activity witnessed before pilot whale stranding

Just days after a pod of long-finned pilot whales stranded on an island in the...

Port River dolphin numbers on the rise

Findings to be published in a forthcoming report show that the number of dolphins living in Adelaide’s Port River have increased threefold in the last two decades.

The success of the population increase is being put down to improved water quality in the river and its estuary according to the author of the report, WDC’s Research Fellow Emeritus, Dr Mike Bossley, who has been studying the dolphins for over 25 years.

Port Adelaide continues to be a busy working port with the dolphins having to contend with shipping and industrial activity as well as recreational fishing. In 2005, the Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary was created to afford the dolphins and their habitat increased protection. The improvement in water quality has led to more fish and other prey being available for the dolphins. Dolphins from further out to sea have been visiting and staying while resident dolphins have also seen their numbers rise.

However, despite this good news, issues still remain with entanglement in fishing gear, boat strikes and a continuing high mortality rate in calves all continuing to pose threats to the dolphins. In recent weeks, three attempts have been made to remove fishing line from a 15 year-old male dolphin known as Bella, so far without success, though the dolphin appears to be in otherwise good health.

Dr Bossley’s research was carried out in conjunction with WA’s Murdoch University Cetacean Research Unit and marine biologist Aude Steiner.

You can help support his work by adopting a Port River dolphin today.