Dear All

We have recently had a paper accepted for JMBA on our local cetaceans. 
Unfortunately, the publisher, not the journal, fouled up after the proofs stage 
and put the wrong figures in. Although they will publish an erratum, the paper 
will never exist in its correct form, despite the miracle of online publishing.

To help remedy this, we have prepared our own version which can be obtained 
from the lead author Stephen Pikesley (cc; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)



Details follow.



Best



Brendan


Stephen K. Pikesley, Mathew J. Witt, Tom Hardy, Jan Loveridge, Jeff Loveridge, 
Ruth Williams, Brendan J. Godley  (2011) Cetacean sightings and strandings: 
evidence for spatial and temporal trends? Journal of the Marine Biological 
Association of the UK. Published online: 09 June 2011. 
DOI:10.1017/S0025315411000464


ABSTRACT
Cetacean species and their habitats are under threat and effective marine 
management mitigation strategies require knowledge and understanding of 
cetacean ecology. This requires data that are challenging and expensive to 
obtain; incidental sightings/strandings data are potential underused resources. 
In this study, incidental cetacean sightings (n = 6631) and strandings (n = 
1856) in coastal waters of Cornwall, southwest Britain (1991 to 2008) were 
analysed for evidence of spatial and temporal patterns or trends. Eighteen 
species were recorded sighted and/or stranded; key species were identified as 
bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops truncatus), harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena), 
common dolphin (Delphinus delphis), Risso's dolphin (Grampus griseus) and minke 
whale (Balaenoptera acutorostrata). There were significant decreases in 
bottlenose dolphin sightings and pod size but an increase in harbour porpoise 
and minke whale sightings. Cetacean strandings showed a recent decrease over 
time although there was a significant positive trend in harbour porpoise 
strandings that correlated with sightings. Incidence of sightings and 
strandings were both greater on the south coast than the north coast. When 
Marine Tour Operator (MTO) data were analysed, distinct species-specific 
inshore and offshore habitat use was evident. With rigorous interrogation and 
editing, significant patterns and trends were gained from incidentally 
collected data, highlighting the importance of public engagement with such 
recording schemes and the potential of these underused resources.


See a film detailing our work with Peruvian NGO Prodelphinus here:
http://www.youtube.com/universityofexeter#p/c/868210A42F3C27E1/0/OhtVmUJ6hkY
See a film of our Kenya Fieldcourse here:
http://www.youtube.com/universityofexeter#p/c/868210A42F3C27E1

Dr. Brendan J. Godley
Associate Professor in Conservation Biology
Centre for Ecology & Conservation
University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus
TR10 9EZ, UK
Tel: +44 1326 371 861
http://biosciences.exeter.ac.uk/cec/
http://uk.linkedin.com/in/brendangodley
http://www.seaturtle.org/mtrg/
Editor-in-Chief, Endangered Species Research
http://www.int-res.com/journals/esr/

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