Dear colleagues
on behalf of all co-authors, I am very pleased to inform you on the
publication of the following paper in Aquatic Conservation:

Pace DS, Giacomini G, Campana I, Paraboschi M, Pellegrino G, Silvestri M,
Alessi J, Angeletti D, Cafaro V, Pavan G, Ardizzone G, Arcangeli. 2019. An
integrated approach for cetacean knowledge and conservation in the central
Mediterranean Sea using research and social media data sources. DOI:
10.1002/aqc.3117


Abstract
1. Sources of data other than those derived from conventional research
protocols may contribute valuable information to fill gaps in knowledge
about cetacean occurrences and diversity in a given area and help address
conservation issues.
2. The performance of a method to examine cetacean communities based on
presence records systematically derived from shared photographs and videos
posted by boaters and maritime operators on social media (e.g. YouTube and
Facebook) combined with patchy distributed visual/acoustic data collected
by researchers has been evaluated.
3. Records (N = 1,274) gathered over a 10‐year period (2008–2017) have been
used to obtain insights into species' presence and habitat selection in a
scattered study area of the central Mediterranean Sea (Italy). The
effectiveness of the method, practical and theoretical advantages,
limitations, and challenges of using data originated from social media for
research and conservation purposes are discussed.
4. Seven out of the eight cetacean species regularly residing in the
Mediterranean have been reported in the area, with different relative
densities. Maximum entropy modelling techniques have been applied to the
datasets derived from (a) social media, (b) research surveys, and (c) the
combination of the two, using six fixed variables as proxies for cetacean
presence. Distance from the coast and depth emerged as the main variables
predicting encounters, with specificities related to the ecology of the
species.
5. The approach was reliable enough to obtain broad‐scale, baseline
information on cetacean communities in the region, on the basis of which
initial conservation recommendations and future research programmes can be
proposed.
6. With the increasing need for studying whale and dolphin population
ecology coming from national/international directives, support from
citizens to aid research may act as a practical, inexpensive solution to
gathering extensive spatial–temporal data for regional‐scale monitoring and
for the development of management priorities.


This is the link where you can download the paper
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aqc.3117

Thank you and very best wishes,
Daniela

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Daniela Silvia Pace, PhD
Department of Environmental Biology
Marine Ecology Lab
Sapienza University of Rome
Viale dell’Università 32
00185 Rome, Italy
mail: danielasilvia.p...@uniroma1.it
mobile: +39 346 1039652
office: +39 06 4991 4763
skype: lagenorinco

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