Hooking anglers on
dolphins’ fishing techniques
SUN PHOTO BY AL HEMINGWAY
Mote senior biologist Kim Bassos-Hull and the Sun's own WaterLine publisher Josh Olive share a lighter moment during the Science Café.
SUN PHOTO BY AL HEMINGWAY
Kim Bassos-Hull, a senior biologist for Mote, explains the various methods dolphins use to hunt their prey to survive.
When people think of dolphins, most remember “Flipper,” a 1960s television series in which an “aquatic Lassie,” as NBC dubbed the beast, was the constant companion of a ranger and his two sons at a fictional marine reserve in Florida.
But there is much more to these intelligent, seagoing mammals. Earlier this week, Kim Bassos-Hull, a senior biologist for the dolphin research program at Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, and Josh Olive, a seasoned angler and publisher of the Sun’s own WaterLine Weekly Magazine, held an open forum in the Science Café series of lectures, “Go Fish! A discussion about how dolphins and humans hunt for fish” at the Laishley Crab House in Punta Gorda.