Dear Colleagues,

I am pleased to announce the following paper recently published in Frontiers in 
Marine Science (Special Issue: People-Marine mammal interactions)
Under Pressure: Cetaceans and Fisheries Co-occurrence off the Coasts of Ghana 
and Côte d’Ivoire (Gulf of Guinea)

De Boer MN, Saulino JT, Van Waerebeek K and Aarts G (2016) Under Pressure: 
Cetaceans and Fisheries Co-occurrence off the Coasts of Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire
(Gulf of Guinea). Front. Mar. Sci. 3:178. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2016.00178

Abstract
Within the Gulf of Guinea high levels of fisheries-related cetacean mortality 
(bycatch and direct-capture) has been documented. For locally rare species such 
removals could potentially lead to significant population level effects. 
However, information on the cetacean abundance and distribution is scarce. 
Similarly, it remains largely unreported where fishing fleets operate offshore. 
A cetacean survey took place during geophysical surveys (2013–2014) along the 
coasts of Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire. This provided a unique opportunity to study 
both offshore cetacean and fishing communities. Due to large group-sizes, 
melon-headed whales were the most abundant (0.34 animals km−1) followed by 
Fraser’s dolphins and short-finned pilot whales. Range state records were 
confirmed for melon-headed whale and Fraser’s dolphin in Ivoirian waters and 
ten further species represented first at-sea sightings. The artisanal fishing 
canoe was most abundant (92% of all vessels) and recorded up to 99.5 km from 
the Ghanaian coast. Asian trawlers operated over shelf areas and tuna 
purse-seine vessels in deep oceanic and slope waters. Fraser’s dolphins, 
melon-headed whales, pantropical spotted dolphins, bottlenose dolphins, and 
pilot whales were recorded in areas with the highest fishing densities. 
Melon-headed whales, pilot whales, and rough-toothed dolphins were observed in 
vicinity of trawlers; bottlenose dolphins, pantropical spotted dolphins, and 
pilot whales in vicinity of canoes. Some notable differences were found in the 
species composition between the present surveys and port-based surveys of 
landed cetaceans (bycatch/direct-captures). These may be explained by (1) 
feeding strategies (nocturnal vs. diurnal; surface vs. deep water); (2) 
different attractions to vessels/fishing gear; (3) variable body sizes; and (4) 
difficulty to positively identify species. Despite these differences, both 
cetaceans and fishing vessels predominantly occurred in shelf and slope waters 
(< 1000m depth contour), making fishery-related mortality likely. The poor 
knowledge on population trends of cetaceans in this unique upwelling region, 
together with a high demand for cetacean products for human consumption (as 
“marine bushmeat”) may lead to a potential decline of some species that may go 
unnoticed. These new insights can provide a foundation for the urgently 
required risk assessments of cetacean mortality in fisheries within the 
northern Gulf of Guinea.

The paper can be downloaded from Frontiers in Marine 
Science:<http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2016.00178/full>

A pdf including the supplements can also be downloaded from my Research Page.

<https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Marijke_De_Boer/publications>

Kind Regards,
Marijke de Boer, Ph.D

<marijke.deb...@wur.nl> Wageningen Marine Research, Den Helder, Netherlands


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