2 research outputs found
Distribution and abundance of long-finned pilot whales in the North Atlantic, estimated from NASS-87 and NASS-89 data
During the summers of 1987 and 1989, large scale transect surveys were conducted
throughout the North Atlantic by several national agencies in Denmark (off Greenland),
Faroe Islands, Iceland, Norway and Spain (North Atlantic Sightings Surveys, NASS-87 and
NASS-89). This paper analyses the pilot whale (Globicephala melas) survey data collected by
three Icelandic and one Faroese survey vessel in 1987, and four Icelandic, one Faroese and
one Spanish vessel in 1989. Norwegian survey vessels operated north and east of this area in
both years, but only five groups (three primary sightings) were observed in 1989 and none in
1987. Furthermore, no sightings were made in the area north and northeast of Iceland, thus
indicating that the joint surveys covered the northernmost areas of pilot whale distribution
east of 42°W. The area further to the west was not covered in either survey. The coastal
European waters between 42-52°N were covered by the Spanish vessel in 1989. Sightings
made in 1989 by the Icelandic vessels tended to be at the southernmost boundaries of the
survey area.
The present data were examined with respect to several potential stratification factors,
namely geographic block, Beaufort (i.e. wind speed), vessel and school size, but sample size
precluded stratification by all these factors simultaneously. The encounter rate was generally
lower in the 1987 survey than in 1989, but the difference was not statistically significant. The
total estimate for the 1989 survey, covering a wider area and further to the south than in 1987,
was 778,000 (CV=0.295). This is regarded as the best available estimate of the total stock of
long-finned pilot whales in the northeastern North Atlantic Ocean, although small numbers
occur outside the NASS survey areas. The paper discusses potential biases in the abundance
estimates, and the problems of estimating pilot whale abundance from sightings data
Investigating harbor porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) population differentiation using RAD-tag genotyping by sequencing
The population status of the harbor porpoise (
Phocoena phocoena
) in the Baltic Sea and adjacent regions is still not
fully resolved. Here, we present a pilot study using the double digest restriction-site associated DNA sequencing
(ddRAD-seq) genotyping-
by
-sequencing method on specimens from the Baltic Sea, eastern North Sea, Spain and the
Black Sea. From a single Illumina lane and a set of 49 individuals, w
e
obtained around 6000 SNPs. We used these
markers to estimate population structure and differentiation, and identified splits between porpoises from the North
Sea and the Baltic, and within regions in the Baltic Sea (between the Belt Sea and the Inner Baltic Sea). The SNP
analysis confirms population structure elucidated by previous mtDNA/microsatellite studies.
We
demonstrate the
feasibility of SNP analysis on opportunistically sampled cetacean samples, with varying DNA quality, for population
diversity and divergence analysis