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91传媒 scientist takes dolphin research to new heights with UAS flights

91传媒 scientist takes dolphin research to new heights with UAS flights

dolphins in water
Dolphins pictured in the Mississippi Sound. (Photo submitted)

Contact: Meg Henderson

STARKVILLE, Miss.鈥擲eeing a dolphin leap from the ocean鈥檚 surface isn鈥檛 enough for Mississippi State鈥檚 Holley Muraco. Her research demands a closer look.

Muraco, an assistant research professor in animal and dairy sciences and scientist with the university鈥檚 Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, or MAFES, started using cutting-edge unmanned aircraft system technology, or drones, equipped with thermal imaging technology to study dolphins in their habitats. The UAS captures critical details that would be difficult, if not impossible, to see from the shore.

dolphins diving in water
Dolphins swim in open water. Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station partnered with Coral World in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Theater of the Sea in Florida to study dolphins in their natural habitats using thermal imaging technology from drones. (Photo Submitted)

A few years ago, Muraco conducted a pilot study flying drones from Cat Island to monitor sea turtles. Amazed at the detailed images of marine life the aircraft鈥檚 camera could capture from the Mississippi Sound, she wondered how drones might be used to take a closer look at dolphins鈥 health through their movements and any observable skin abnormalities.

Through 91传媒鈥檚 Coastal Research and Extension Center, the university partnered with Coral World in the U.S. Virgin Islands and Theater of the Sea in Florida. Using start-up funding from MAFES, Muraco captured and compared video and thermal data from dolphins in two different aquatic environments: the Virgin Islands鈥 crystal-clear waters and the Florida Keys鈥 tannic, sediment-rich mangrove lagoons鈥攖he latter mimicking the Mississippi Sound鈥檚 murky waters. Matthew Virden, an 91传媒 Extension associate, graduate student and drone pilot, assisted.

鈥淒rone piloting skills are becoming increasingly important in marine life research because they can cover larger distances in less time, collect more consistent data and reduce the disturbances and costs associated with traditional surveys,鈥 Virden said. 鈥淔or me, developing strong piloting skills not only facilitates collaborative studies like this, but it also supports my own long-term research goals in conservation and restoration.鈥

Muraco said, 鈥淓veryone told me that flying a thermal drone over the mangroves was a waste of time because the sensors would just reflect the surface of the water and not pick up the dolphins below. But with Matthew鈥檚 expertise in calibrating the sensors, we were able to see the dolphins swimming underwater, as if they were moving on a map.鈥

Muraco explained that, in addition to irregular movement patterns, dolphin skin diseases are a symptom of poor general health and evidence that the water鈥檚 microbiome is imbalanced, containing more 鈥渂ad鈥 bacteria than 鈥済ood.鈥 In the Mississippi Sound, this bacterial imbalance occurs when rivers flush excess pollutants into the sound or after major influxes of freshwater, often from extended openings of the Bonnet Carr茅 Spillway.

Muraco hopes to secure additional funding to replicate her current research using thermal drones in the Mississippi Sound.

鈥淭he Mississippi Sound is the only home our estuary dolphins know. Studies have shown that the sound is likely made up of numerous smaller home ranges for different dolphin groups, which may not roam farther than their local bay. When their home becomes uninhabitable, they don鈥檛 have the option to evacuate to safer waters,鈥 she said.

Muraco said that robust data collection on dolphins鈥 movements and skin conditions would establish a baseline for monitoring changes in their health and behavior鈥攆or instance, in response to a major natural or human-caused disaster. Muraco sees this effort as one piece of the puzzle, illustrating the interconnections between environmental, animal and human health.听

鈥淒olphins are a 鈥榗anary in the coal mine鈥 species. They serve as early warning signs of environmental problems and are vulnerable to many of the same illnesses that affect humans. Ultimately, everything is connected, and I look forward to one day having all the data to show that big picture,鈥 she said.

Learn more about 91传媒鈥檚 Department of Animal and Dairy Sciences at and the Coastal Research and Extension Center at . Find MAFES at .

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woman in water with dolphin
Holley Muraco, an 91传媒 assistant research professor in animal and dairy sciences and scientist with the university鈥檚 Mississippi Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station, with a dolphin at Coral World in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The university partnered with Coral World and Theater of the Sea in Florida to study dolphins in their natural habitats using thermal imaging technology from drones. (Photo submitted)