Dear Marmamers,

We are pleased to announce the publication of the following article:

 

Silva, M.A.; Prieto, R.; Magalhães, S.; Seabra, M.I.; Machete, M. & Hammond, 
P.S. 2012. Incorporating information on bottlenose dolphin distribution into 
marine protected area design. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater 
Ecosystems, 22: 122-133.

 

Available online at:  http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/aqc.1243/pdf

 

 

ABSTRACT

1.      The steady growth of the whale-watching activities in the Azores and 
its concentration in a small area that partly overlaps the home range of a 
resident group of bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) was one of the 
driving forces to proposing part of the range of this group as a marine 
protected area (MPA).
2.      Six years of data collected during boat surveys were used to 
investigate how dolphins used the candidate MPA (cMPA) and whether they showed 
any preference for the cMPA over adjacent areas. This work also estimated the 
fraction of the resident individuals and group's range included in the cMPA and 
examined whether there were any temporal changes in its use.
3.      Mean daily encounter rate of bottlenose dolphins was higher inside than 
outside the cMPA. Dolphin sightings inside the cMPA were nearly double what was 
predicted by the survey effort. Dolphins used the cMPA with similar intensity 
throughout the years.
4.      Resident dolphins were frequently sighted in the cMPA. However, less 
than 20% of the known range (650 km2) and 41% (39 km2) of the core area of the 
group lay within the cMPA. The reliability in the use of the cMPA over a 6-year 
period suggests its importance for the dolphin population remained relatively 
stable but its surface area was clearly insufficient to satisfy the spatial 
requirements of the resident group.
5.      Based on these findings, it was proposed to the Regional Government of 
the Azores to extend the boundaries of the cMPA. Accordingly, the modified 
protected area established in 2008 includes 100% of the core area of the 
resident group of bottlenose dolphins. This study provides an example of how 
information on cetacean habitat-use patterns may be used to design ecologically 
meaningful protected areas for this group.

 

Regards,

Mónica

 

Mónica Almeida e Silva

Post Doctoral Fellow

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Centro do IMAR da Universidade dos Açores 
Departamento de Oceanografia e Pescas 
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E-mail: [email protected] 
http://www.horta.uac.pt/projectos/cetamarh/ 
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http://www.portulano.org/wkit/index.html 
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Biology Department, MS#33 
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution 
Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA 
E-mail: [email protected] 
http://www.whoi.edu/ <http://www.whoi.edu/>  

 

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