Inviting Scientific Collaborations on the TADpole — the Pole-Mounted Tag Attachment Device
Is your organization interested in collaborating with the Sarasota Dolphin Research Program on using the TADpole to tag dolphins at your study site?

Using the TADpole to attach a Wildlife Computers SPLASH10-397A satellite-linked tag to an Atlantic spotted dolphin over the West Florida Shelf, April 2024. Photo ©Sarasota Dolphin Research Program | Photo taken under NMFS/MMPA Scientific Research Permit No. 26622.
As of October 2025, our pole-mounted Tag Attachment Device (known as the TADpole) has been used successfully to tag three species of bow-riding dolphins with satellite-linked transmitters (eight Atlantic spotted dolphins off Florida’s west coast, 10 Hawaiian spinner dolphins, and one bottlenose dolphin in Hawai’i). The tool is at the point of development where we are ready to develop collaborations with others to apply it to their research situations, under specific circumstances.
The SDRP has engaged in tagging dolphins with satellite-linked transmitters since 1990, and has been involved in preparation, deployment and/or tracking of more than 250 such tags. Previously, attachments of satellite-linked tags by SDRP or others had required catch-and-release, or use of a rifle or crossbow to attach a projectile tag via embedding darts. We wanted an alternative to the existing approaches, so in 2014 we began working with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) veterinarian Michael Moore and WHOI engineer Tom Lanagan to develop a new approach.
The prototype design developed by WHOI uses pneumatic pressure to secure a tag to the trailing edge of the dorsal fin of a bow-riding dolphin with a single pin, in just a fraction of a second (see photo above). The development process was iterative. Designs were first tested in the lab on dorsal fins from dead stranded animals. After tweaking, field testing was done in Florida and Hawai’i, followed by more tweaking and lab tests, and then more field tests of the tagging system and attachments in Florida. The primary issue we encountered was the great speed with which dolphins can move out of the device when they feel its touch, before the device could trigger and attach a tag. This rapid response time is great for thwarting toothy grabs by potential predators, but not so good for potential taggers. Further modifications reduced the tagging time by crucial milliseconds. Parallel tests of attachment pins were performed with bottlenose dolphins in Sarasota Bay to better understand the duration of attachment and ultimate tag shedding.
- A description of the tool and its development was published in 2024, and a copy of the paper can be found here
Tags remained attached to the dolphins for up to 89 days for the Atlantic spotted dolphins (median = 38 days), and 62 days for spinner dolphins (median = 44 days, some were seen with tags after transmissions ceased). The median attachment durations were more than three times the medians for tagging small cetaceans via an alternative remote tagging deployment system, dart-attached projectile LIMPET tags, as deployed by Cascadia Research Collective. Attachment durations remain shorter than those for hand-mounted tags, and appear to be related to location of tag placement on the fin, which is very challenging given the different simultaneous 3-D movements of the dolphin, boat, and tagger.
Deployments to date have demonstrated the utility of this tagging tool to the point of planning for use with further field projects, but with a number of caveats. We are still learning the limitations of the tool with each attempted deployment, and identifying refinements needed. It is not, and will likely never be, a dolphin tagging tool that will be applicable for every foreseeable situation. However, every dolphin that can be successfully tagged with this tool is one less dolphin that might not otherwise have been tagged, or might have been tagged with a more invasive and less effective (in terms of attachment duration) approach, such as projectile tags with multiple penetrating darts. Among the conditions leading to successful tag deployments to date are:
- Tagger experience
- Calm conditions
- Slow-moving dolphins
- Proper positioning for surfacings at the bow of the boat (distance and angle).
This last point is likely vessel- and species-dependent. To date, we have tagged three species but believe it can be used with others. Where dolphins ride and surface will depend on the bow wave pushed by the vessel – different vessels will have different bow wave characteristics. We have successfully tagged from bow pulpits on three different kinds of vessels and are now ready to expand our ability to use the tool from a variety of vessels and with different species.
Existing research programs interested in collaborating with application of the TADpole at their research site should provide the following so we can assess feasibility:
- Send us a photo of the proposed tagging vessel, with a good view of the bow;
- Send a video of dolphins riding at the bow;
- Provide conformation that appropriate research permits are in place.
If we consider the project to be feasible and safe, then a next step would likely involve arranging to bring one of our staff members to your field site with the TADpole, to initiate tagging and potentially train local staff in its use.
Please email Randy Wells, RWells@Mote.org and Aaron Barleycorn, Barleycorn@Mote.org if you are interested in using the TADpole at your research site.
Read more about how we’ve used the TADpole
Spinner Dolphin Studies
TADpole Breaks New Ground in Spinner Dolphin Studies During field work in O'ahu, Hawaii in earlier this summer (2025), SDRP collaborated with Robin Baird of Cascadia Research Collective to deploy satellite-linked tags
TADpoles and Dolphins
What do TADpoles have to do with dolphins? Development of a remote Tag Attachment Device The Sarasota Dolphin Research Program has acted as a testbed for the development of many
Two Offshore Dolphins Tagged
Dolphins Tagged Off the West Florida Shelf We were able to sneak in a day of offshore field work between fronts the week of Dec. 18, 2024. We tagged two Atlantic spotted
Offshore Research Update
June 2024 Offshore Dolphin Research Update Since 2022, we’ve been conducting health assessments of offshore dolphins to gather data needed to address critical information gaps for the little-known species that regularly inhabit west
Notes from the Lab and Field
This Atlantic spotted dolphin nicknamed Hannah was tagged 45 miles offshore of Sarasota using a new tool we developed. New Tagging Technique Developed in Sarasota Could Impact Dolphins Worldwide If you’ve









