
The Sarasota Dolphin Research Program:
Our Approach to Helping Dolphins
Our Approach to Helping Dolphins

We conduct the longest-running study of a wild dolphin population in the world and have been learning about the daily lives and threats to the dolphins of Sarasota Bay, Florida, since our program began in October 1970.

Today, we share our knowledge through national and international collaborations designed to help conserve wild dolphin populations — not just in Florida and in the U.S., but throughout the world.

Our goal with every research and conservation project that we undertake locally, nationally and internationally is to contribute to a better understanding of the structure and dynamics of dolphin, whale, and porpoise populations, as well as the natural and human-induced factors that impact them.

UNCOVERING
THE SECRET LIVES OF
DOLPHINS
We’ve documented six generations of dolphins in Sarasota Bay, including the oldest-known wild dolphin in the world. Nicklo lived to age 67.
50-plus years of study has given us an unparalleled window into the world of wild dolphins. Our home base, Sarasota Bay, Florida, is a unique natural laboratory where we have spent a half-century studying their lives — we know their lineages, their companions, their favorite hangouts and even their eating habits. We’ve borne witness to hundreds of dolphin births and been there to learn what we could from dolphin deaths.
These coastal dolphins are a permanent community — our neighbors — whose lives are helping us to understand dolphin populations throughout the world.
THREATS TO WILD
DOLPHINS
DOLPHINS
As top predators in their environments, dolphins face few natural threats. But locally and worldwide, they face numerous threats from anthropogenic — human induced — causes. One part of our mission is to help educate people like you on how you can help keep wild dolphins safe.
WHERE WE WORK
Conservation or Research Project
Graduate Student Theses
Consulting/Advising
Dolphin Tracking
FEATURES
Milestones
When we began thinking about ways to celebrate our milestone 50th year, our initial plans
Our Golden Anniversary
On Oct. 3, 1970, researcher Blair Irvine attached the first tags on Sarasota bottlenose dolphins,
Siesta Key’s “Squirt” the Dolphin
This year (2023) we’ve been getting a lot of questions about a tagged dolphin that people have been seeing
Feeling the Heat
Feeling the Heat During a Hot Summer People around the world are feeling extreme heat this summer and
Offshore Dolphin Health Assessment
On May 17-18, 2023, we tagged and collected biological samples from two bottlenose and two Atlantic spotted dolphins
Dolphin Moms Use ‘Baby Talk’
We’ve all probably done it: Change the pitch and tone of our voices when talking to babies. Now, new
Another Successful Rescue
A Successful Dolphin Rescue Near Marco Island Earlier this month, Florida’s Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) received
Leading a Calf Rescue
Sarasota Dolphin Research Program Leads Effort to Rescue Dolphin Calf from Entangled and Embedded Fishing Gear
Intern Opportunity: Eugenie Clark Skills and Leadership
We're pleased to partner once again with Minorities in Shark Science (MISS) and Havenworth Coastal Conservation to offer the
Dolphin Personalities and Conservation
Evidence of consistent individual differences (IDs) in behavior, indicative of individual personalities (also referred as behavioral types or coping