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Dolphin expert Randall Wells said anglers shouldn't release fish around dolphins. But regulations require anglers to throw back undersize and excess fish without accounting for the presence of the mammals. "It's an area where the various fishery agencies need to come together and find a solution," said Wells, a researcher at Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, Fla. A federal agent who investigates reported attacks on dolphins said he hasn't noticed an increase in violence against them. But he said no one really knows the extent of the problem because so many confrontations likely occur 20 to 30 miles offshore in deep waters. "That far out the bodies are never going to wash up on shore," said Allan Coker, who works with NOAA's fisheries law enforcement office in Niceville, Fla. Coker helped investigate a case last year when an informant reported that the captain of a 60-foot commercial fishing boat based in Panama City was making pipe bombs to toss at meddlesome bottlenose dolphin. "When he was offshore and dolphins approached he'd light one and throw it in the water," said Coker. "The deckhands said it would rock the whole boat." Authorities don't know if any dolphins were killed, but a judge sentenced Capt. Garry Alvin Key, 51, to two years imprisonment in March after he pleaded guilty to illegally possessing explosives and taking or attempting to take marine mammals. Two other captains, one from Florida and another from Alabama, have been placed on probation and fined $1,000 each since 2006 after admitting they shot at dolphins stealing fish from their boats. One used a .357-caliber Magnum, court records show. Coker said complaints about such incidents often come from people who are upset at the sight of someone shooting at an animal that many still associate with the 1960s TV show "Flipper." "A lot of times it happens on a charter boat where there's someone it doesn't sit well with," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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