Dear colleagues,
My co-authors and I are enthusiastic to inform you of the publication of
this new paper in open access. It presents an estimate of mortality at
sea based on small cetacean carcasses observed during aerial surveys in
French Atlantic waters and analysed by Distance Sampling during the
winter of 2021. It also explores the complementarity of these results
with estimates inferred from strandings collected on beaches using the
reverse drift method.
Peltier H, Laran S, Dabin W, Daniel P and others (2024) From the sky and
on the beaches: complementary tools to evaluate common dolphin bycatch
in the Bay of Biscay. Endang Species Res 53:509-522.
https://doi.org/10.3354/esr01310
Abstract:
Since 1989, multiple stranding events of common dolphins have been
regularly recorded along the French Atlantic coast. Examination of the
carcasses revealed that most animals presented evidence of bycatch.
Using stranding data to infer bycatch levels reveals the highest levels
of bycatch to have been recorded since 2016 (4000 to 9000 bycaught
individuals). This approach is directly influenced by drift conditions,
which can greatly contribute to or hinder our ability to estimate
bycatch at sea. In the winter of 2021/2022, the French stranding network
recorded an unusually high number of strandings until mid-February and
few records in March. Investigation of drift conditions revealed low
probability of stranding in March due to constant east-west winds.
Reverse drift modelling of carcasses stranded in January and February
resulted in an estimate of 3670 (95% CI [2750; 5170]) bycaught common
dolphins. Dedicated aerial surveys were conducted in the same area
during this period, designed to assess abundance and distribution of
marine megafauna in French waters. A high number of carcasses of small
Delphininae were observed in March 2021, and the number of carcasses
floating at sea could be estimated using conventional distance sampling
methodology. In March 2021, mortality at sea was thus estimated at 3250
(95% CI [1288;10198]) common dolphins. The complementary use of both
methodologies resulted in an estimate of 6920 (95%CI [4038;15368])
bycaught individuals during winter 2021/2022. This case study highlights
that a decrease in strandings does not imply a decrease in mortality at
sea. Trends in strandings need to be considered in the light of
scientific evidence to avoid delays in decision making.
I remain at your disposal for any questions.
Best wishes,
Helene Peltier
--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ J'ai
envoyé ce mail à une heure pratique pour moi. Je n'attends pas de
réponse en dehors de vos heures de travail habituelles. I have sent this
email at a time that is convenient for me. I do not expect you to
respond to it outside of your own usual working hours.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ *Hélène
Peltier *- PhD Observatoire PELAGIS – UAR 3462 La Rochelle Université -
CNRS Pôle Analytique 5, Allées de l'Océan 17000 La Rochelle, FRANCE St:
05 46 44 99 10 LD: 05 46 50 76
83https://www.observatoire-pelagis.cnrs.fr/
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "S'il
n'y a pas de solution, c'est qu'il n'y a pas de problème" proverbe
Shadockien.
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