Dolphins and Seals of Port Phillip Bay Melbourne

Dolphins and Seals of Port Phillip Bay Melbourne

How many places in the world can you swim with wild dolphins AND seals on the one tour. Not many but Queenscliff is one of them. People travel from all over the world to experience the Dolphin and Seal swims on offer at Melbourne’s doorstep.

MELBOURNE'S dolphins have officially been recognized as being in a class of their own. Originally thought to be one of the two recognized bottlenose dolphin species, Port Phillip Bay's dolphins have now been confirmed as a new species.

The findings, revealed yesterday in the peer-reviewed scientific journal PLoS ONE, means southern Australia is actually home to three species of bottlenose dolphin.

While she had long suspected this, it took Monash University PhD researcher Kate Charlton-Robb eight years to prove her case.

To do it, she compared the DNA, skull features and appearance of Port Phillip Bay's dolphins with other species to establish the coastal dolphins differed from all other dolphins worldwide.

Named Tursiops australis, the new species common name will be the Burrunan dolphin, after an Aboriginal word meaning ''large sea fish of the porpoise kind''.

Ms Charlton-Robb said that compared to the common bottlenose and the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins, the Burrunan dolphin had a smaller skull and beak as well as a difference in bone structure in the skull. At 2.5 metres long, the new species is smaller than the three-metre common bottlenose dolphin and its three-toned colouring is also unique.

''They're quite distinct from the larger bottlenose dolphins,'' she said. ''And the DNA is very distinct, with its own particular sequence.''

However, while a difference in appearance had been noted historically, often it was put down to variations between male and female.

Among the museum samples used in the study was one that dated to 1915. Originally identified as a female common bottlenose, DNA testing and skull morphology confirmed it was a Burrunan dolphin.

''That's been one of the great things,'' Ms Charlton-Robb said. ''These guys have been living under our noses, but this also showed that they've been here for a while.''

About 100 Burrunan dolphins live in Port Phillip Bay and they are also found in the Gippsland Lakes, where they number about 50. The small population has implications for genetic diversity of the species and Ms Charlton-Robb said she was keen to get the Burrunan dolphin listed as a threatened species.

''We'll be making all the efforts to try to conserve and protect them and get them listed,'' she said. ''But that's the next step.''

Just three new dolphin species have been formally described and recognised since the late 1800s.














































































































































































































Jellyfish are a familiar sight in Port Phillip, and its waters are home to species such as Australian fur seals, bottlenose dolphins, common dolphins,humpback whales, and southern right whales. Many other cetacean species may also migrate off the areas. The smooth toadfish is one of the most common fishes in muddy areas. 

The bay has many endemic species including the bluedevil fish and fantastic sponge walls on the Lonsdale wall in the heads of the bay. It also hosts breeding colonies of Australian fur seals. Occasionally, Australian sea lions,New Zealand fur seals, subantarctic fur seals, and leopard seals may come into the bay as well.Certain individual southern elephant seals may frequent the bay as well.









































Comments