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Dolphin cruises help İstanbul enjoy its Bosporus bottlenoses

Dolphins swim in the Bosphorus strait near İstanbul on July 24, 2024. (Photo by Yasin AKGUL / AFP)

As the first dolphin fin surfaced from the Bosporus, a ripple of excitement went round passengers on a free boat ride to see one of İstanbul’s most graceful sights.

Whether they live there or are just passing through, dolphins and porpoises feel very much at home in the busy strait that bisects the Turkish megapolis of some 16 million people.

The İstanbul city council organizes free summer dolphin spotting trips with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) to raise awareness of the dangers facing the sea mammals.

The wildlife project’s head, Ahmet Yaşar Yıldız, said the city council was doing “everything they can” to keep them in the strait linking the Black Sea to the Mediterranean.

“This is their home, and dolphins must continue to live here,” he said.

Their presence in the Bosporus was the sign of a “perfect ecosystem,” he added. “The strait is clean, cleaner than most bays, and we want to keep it that way.”

Cansu İlkılınç, head of WWF Turkey’s marine mammal program, gives information during a dolphin watching event in the Bosphorus strait near İstanbul on July 24, 2024.
(Photo by Yasin AKGUL / AFP)

Microphone in hand on the boat’s top deck, WWF Turkey’s marine mammals program leader Cansu İlkılınç explained to the crowd below that the strait is home to two species of dolphin and one species of porpoise — an impressive number for an exceptionally busy urban waterway.

Climate change, habitat loss

As a key corridor for international maritime navigation, 39,000 ships passed through the Bosporus Strait last year, according to Turkey’s ministry of transport — not including pleasure boats and the ferries that constantly ply from one side to the other.

Despite the volume of shipping in Turkey’s largest city, dolphins seem to prefer the strait’s waters to the Black Sea and Sea of Marmara on either side.

This is because fish are abundant, and the strong currents spirit away pollution, Yildiz said.

Yet all is not pristine for the dolphins in the strait, the wildlife project lead warned, with threats from climate change, pollution, overfishing and habitat loss.

“Uncontrolled construction and industrialization are a problem everywhere, and it’s a serious problem in Istanbul,” he added.

Yet since the first free educational outings began in 2022, their success has been remarkable.

“Only once have we not seen a dolphin,” Yıldız told AFP, adding that the hundred or so spaces on the trips are booked up “within three minutes” of when they go online every fortnight.

Follow the seagulls

During these outings, the WWF attempts to keep a record of the strait’s resident dolphins, hoping to identify them by a distinctive feature such as a mark or a scar.

“One of them has been living here since 2012, you can recognize it from its dorsal fin,” said Ayse Oruç, head of WWF Turkey’s Marine Biodiversity program, marveling at the variety of life in the heart of “one of the biggest cities in the world.”

Besides the harbor porpoise, the Bosporus is home to both the common and bottlenose dolphin, İlkılınç said.

She offered up a few tips for spotting them: “When the seagulls dive and disturb the water, it means they’ve seen fish underneath, which the dolphins feed on.”

She also advised those hoping to catch a glimpse of a dolphin pod to follow in the wake of cargo ships, tankers and — above all — fishing boats.

Twenty-four-year-old student Deniz Dinçergök came back to shore delighted.

“At one point, a baby dolphin came out of the water and turned around, showing its belly. It was a magnificent moment,” he said.

© Agence France-Presse

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