34 research outputs found
Deep ocean drivers better explain habitat preferences of sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus than beaked whales in the Bay of Biscay
Species Distribution Models are commonly used with surface dynamic environmental variables as proxies for prey distribution to characterise marine top predator habitats. For oceanic species that spend lot of time at depth, surface variables might not be relevant to predict deep-dwelling prey distributions. We hypothesised that descriptors of deep-water layers would better predict the deep-diving cetacean distributions than surface variables. We combined static variables and dynamic variables integrated over different depth classes of the water column into Generalised Additive Models to predict the distribution of sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus and beaked whales Ziphiidae in the Bay of Biscay, eastern North Atlantic. We identified which variables best predicted their distribution. Although the highest densities of both taxa were predicted near the continental slope and canyons, the most important variables for beaked whales appeared to be static variables and surface to subsurface dynamic variables, while for sperm whales only surface and deep-water variables were selected. This could suggest differences in foraging strategies and in the prey targeted between the two taxa. Increasing the use of variables describing the deep-water layers would provide a better understanding of the oceanic species distribution and better assist in the planning of human activities in these habitats.Versión del edito
Distribution and Abundance of Fin whales and other baleen whales in the European Atlantic
The abundance of fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus) and other baleen whales was generated from data collected during
shipboard sightings surveys as part of the Cetacean Offshore Distribution and Abundance in the European Atlantic project
(CODA). The survey area covered offshore waters beyond the continental shelf of the UK, Ireland, France and Spain. The area
was stratified into four blocks and was surveyed by five ships during July 2007. Double platform methods employing the trialconfiguration
method (BT-method) were used. Fin, sei (B. borealis) and minke whales (B. acutorostrata) were positively
identified, with possible sightings of blue whales (B. musculus). Abundance was estimated for these species and for “large baleen
whales” which included fin, sei, fin/sei and blue whales. Abundance for the larger species was estimated using the Mark-
Recapture Line Transect design-based method and also model-based methods using density surface modelling. Sample size
limitations dictated that conventional line transect sampling methods were used to estimate the abundance of minke whales.
Estimates from the two methods were comparable but model-based methods improved the precision and were considered best
estimates. The density of large baleen whale species was greatest in the southern end of the survey area and water depth,
temperature and distance to the 2000m contour were important predictors of their distribution. The total abundance estimated for
the entire survey area was 9,019 (CV=0.11) fin whales and 9,619 (CV= 0.11) large baleen whales. The uncertainty around these
estimates due to duplicate classification and species identification were explored. The fin whale estimate is likely to be
underestimated because it excludes unidentified large whales, of which a large proportion was likely to have been fin whales.
Notwithstanding this, these large baleen whale abundance estimates are the first robust estimates (corrected for responsive
movement and g(0)) for this area. The estimated abundance of minke whales was 6,765 (CV=0.99) and sightings were restricted
to the northern blocks of the survey area. The minke whale estimate, although imprecise and likely underestimated, does provide a
baseline figure for this area and, when considered with results from the SCANS-II continental shelf surveys of July 2005, gives a
more comprehensive picture of this species in the European Atlantic. These abundance estimates are important contributions to
the conservation and management of these species in the Northeast Atlantic
Abundance of baleen whales in the European Atlantic
The abundance of fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus), sei whales (B. borealis) and minke whales (B. acutorostrata) was estimated
from data collected during shipboard sightings surveys conducted as part of CODA and TNASS (Faroese block) in July 2007 in
offshore waters of the European Atlantic west of the UK, Ireland, France and Spain, combined with data collected from shipboard and
aerial surveys of European Atlantic continental shelf waters conducted as part of SCANS-II in July 2005. Double platform methods
employing the trial-configuration method (BT-method) were used in all shipboard surveys. Analysis used Mark-Recapture Distance
Sampling to account for animals missed on the transect line. Density surface modelling was undertaken to generate model-based
abundance estimates and maps of predicted density. Estimates are presented for the SCANS-II and CODA survey areas. Estimates for
the Faroese block of TNASS have been presented elsewhere.
The abundance of fin whales in the CODA and SCANS-II areas was estimated as 19,354 (CV 0.24) for identified sightings and 29,512
(CV 0.26) when adjusted to include a proportion of unidentified large whale abundance (which included large baleen and sperm
whales), prorated by number of sightings, because there were a large number of such sightings in one of the CODA survey blocks. The
model-based estimate of identified fin whales was 19,751 (CV 0.17), more precise than the design-based estimate. Fin whales were
mainly found in the southern part of the CODA survey area. Estimates based on identified sightings were comparable to those from
the Spanish survey conducted as part of 1989 NASS but were larger if adjusted for a proportion of unidentified large whales. Sei
whales were rare except in the southwest of the survey area; the estimate of abundance was 619 (CV 0.34) for identified sightings and
765 (CV 0.43) adjusted for a proportion of unidentified large whales. Minke whale abundance was estimated for shelf and offshore
European Atlantic waters as 30,410 (CV 0.34). The model-based estimate was less precise and considerably larger
Marine megafauna niche coexistence and hotspot areas in a temperate ecosystem
Versión del editor2,08
Modelización espacial de la distribución de cetáceos en el norte de la Península Ibérica: la importancia de incluir información de sus presas
Con el fin de identificar áreas ecológicamente significativas, necesitamos relacionar la distribución de especies con descriptores ecológicos que nos ayuden a comprender su distribución. En el medio marino, los modelos de distribución de especies (MDE) han sido tradicionalmente desarrollado en base a descriptores ecológicos indirectos (como clorofila y temperatura superficial del mar) recogidos a través de imágenes de satélite. Aunque las especies marinas pueden utilizar estas señales ambientales para localizar sus presas, el uso de información sobre la distribución de las mismas sería más informativo que el uso de estos descriptores indirectos. Gracias a las campañas oceanográficas multidisciplinares se puede recoger información simultánea de varios niveles tróficos, desde el plancton a los depredadores marinos, incluyendo sus principales presas pelágicas: los pequeños peces pelágicos. Por lo tanto, la inclusión de esta información en los MDE debería ser más relevante que las variables oceanográficas indirectas. Para testar esta hipótesis, desarrollamos MDE para las tres especies más abundantes de cetáceos que se registran en el norte de la Península Ibérica durante las campañas de primavera del Instituto Español de Oceanografía, PELACUS (2007-2013). Estas especies fueron el delfín común Delphinus delphis, el delfín mular Tursiops truncatus y el calderón común Globicephala melas. Dependiendo de las especies consideradas, se identificaron diferentes variables ambientales como importantes a la hora de explicar los patrones de distribución; pero las cifras globales ponen de manifiesto la principal contribución de la batimetría, seguido de la temperatura superficial del mar y la variabilidad espacial en la distribución de los pequeños peces pelágicos. Estos resultados tienen importantes implicaciones en
reconocer la importancia de los estudios oceanográficos multidisciplinares para la obtención de descriptores ecológicos directos para mejorar los modelos de distribución de depredadores marinos
Iberian harbour porpoise: an update
19 pages, 7 tables, 3 figuresReports submitted to the IWC SC in 2020 and 2022 highlighted the apparently precarious state of the Iberian porpoise due to high bycatch mortality. In the present report we provide an update with (mainly) recent information on the biology, ecology, threats and conservation status. The Committee noted that the level of bycatch of Iberian harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) is considered unsustainable and will consequently cause a population-level decline. In 2022 the Committee recommended immediate actions to effectively reduce and, where possible, eliminate bycatch of harbour porpoise throughout Iberian Peninsula waters.
Information published since spring 2022 includes papers on aerial surveys in Portugal, bycatch mortality estimated from strandings in Galicia (NW Spain) and Portugal, and diet. We also present some unpublished and in press material from project reports, conference presentations, the forthcoming report of the ICES Working Group on Marine Mammal Ecology (WGMME), and a review of biology, ecology, threats to, and status of, Iberian porpoise due to be published later this year. Estimates of total mortality derived from on-board observation and from strandings both suffer from limited and incomplete data, e.g. due to low onboard observer coverage, and an absence of bycatch information from strandings data for most of the northern coast of Spain, but generally suggest that annual bycatch mortality could be around 200-300 animals.
Spain is developing a Recovery Plan for Iberian porpoise, which Spain considers to be “in danger of extinction”. Portugal has established a Working Group to develop the necessary Action Plan to minimize the serious threat of cetacean bycatch in fishing. The range of the population was recently designated as an Important Marine Mammal Area. It is suggested that a Working Group concerned with the ecology and conservation of this population could be formed, for example involving ASCOBANS, ACCOBAMS, ICES and the IWCPeer reviewe
Towards a better characterisation of deep-diving whales’ distributions by using prey distribution model outputs?
In habitat modelling, environmental variables are assumed to be proxies of lower trophic levels
distribution and by extension, of marine top predator distributions. More proximal variables,
such as potential prey fields, could refine relationships between top predator
distributions and their environment. In situ data on prey distributions are not available over
large spatial scales but, a numerical model, the Spatial Ecosystem And POpulation DYnamics
Model (SEAPODYM), provides simulations of the biomass and production of zooplankton
and six functional groups of micronekton at the global scale. Here, we explored whether
generalised additive models fitted to simulated prey distribution data better predicted deepdiver
densities (here beaked whales Ziphiidae and sperm whales Physeter macrocephalus)
than models fitted to environmental variables. We assessed whether the combination of
environmental and prey distribution data would further improve model fit by comparing their
explanatory power. For both taxa, results were suggestive of a preference for habitats associated
with topographic features and thermal fronts but also for habitats with an extended
euphotic zone and with large prey of the lower mesopelagic layer. For beaked whales, no
SEAPODYM variable was selected in the best model that combined the two types of variables,
possibly because SEAPODYM does not accurately simulate the organisms on which
beaked whales feed on. For sperm whales, the increase model performance was only marginal.
SEAPODYM outputs were at best weakly correlated with sightings of deep-diving cetaceans, suggesting SEAPODYM may not accurately predict the prey fields of these taxa.
This study was a first investigation and mostly highlighted the importance of the physiographic
variables to understand mechanisms that influence the distribution of deep-diving
cetaceans. A more systematic use of SEAPODYM could allow to better define the limits of
its use and a development of the model that would simulate larger prey beyond 1,000 m
would probably better characterise the prey of deep-diving cetaceans.En prens
Working Group on Marine Mammal Ecology (WGMME)
162 pages.-- This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY 4.0)The Working Group on Marine Mammal Ecology met in 2021 to address new information on marine mammal ecology relevant to management.
Two terms of references were standing ToRs; under the first of these, ToR A, new and updated information on seal and cetacean population abundance, population/stock structure, manage-ment frameworks as well as anthropogenic threats to individual health and population status were reviewed along with findings on threats to marine mammals such as bycatch, pollution, marine debris and noise. ToR B is a cooperation with WGBIODIV to review species-specific for-aging distributions (considering horizontal and vertical dimensions depending on data availa-bility) and to estimate consumption by marine mammal species representative in case study ar-eas. ToR C was implemented to review aspects of marine mammal fishery interactions not cov-ered by ICES WGBYC. ToR D is the second standing ToR and concerns updating the WGMME seal database, which was updated with the latest dataN
Working Group on Marine Mammal Ecology (WGMME)
159 pages.-- This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0)The Working Group on Marine Mammal Ecology met in 2022 to address five terms of reference. Under the first of these, ToR A, new information on cetacean and seal population abundance, distribution, population/stock structure, was reviewed, including information on vagrant ma-rine mammal species. This was done to ensure the recording of possible range changes in marine mammal species in the future.
For cetaceans, an update is given for the different species, providing for a latest estimate for all species studies. In this report, particular attention is given to the updating of information from Canadian and US waters, and together with those countries, latest estimates for cetacean species are provided. For seals, latest monitoring results are given for harbour, grey and Baltic ringed seals. In addition, where possible, local long-term trends are illustrated for those species, based on earlier WGMME efforts to assemble these data into the WGMME seal database. For both spe-cies’ groups, a first account of vagrant species is providedN