Dear MARMAM readers,

We are happy to announce the publication of the following paper in Marine 
Ecology Progress Series:

Derville S, Constantine R, Baker CS, Oremus M, Torres LG (2016) Environmental correlates of nearshore habitat distribution by the Critically Endangered Māui dolphin. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 551:261-275

Abstract:

Effective management of space-use conflicts with anthropogenic activities is 
contingent upon reliable knowledge of a species’ ecology. The Māui 
dolphin/Cephalorhynchus hectori maui/  is endemic to New Zealand and is listed 
as Critically Endangered, mainly as a result of fisheries bycatch. Despite 
conservation efforts, the population was estimated at 55 animals in 2011. Here 
we investigate environmental correlates of Māui dolphin nearshore distribution, 
using 119 encounters with Māui dolphin groups during boat-based, coastal 
surveys across 4 summers (2010, 2011, 2013, 2015). We describe the nearshore 
distribution using a kernel density analysis with differential smoothing on the 
x- and y-axes to account for the nearshore preference of the dolphins and the 
survey design. In all years, dolphins were encountered consistently in a 
restricted area (4 year area of overlap: 87.3 km2). We modelled habitat 
preference with boosted regression trees, using presence/absence of dolphins 
relative to static and dynamic environmental predictors. An index of coastal 
turbidity was created based on a near-linear relationship between Secchi disk 
measurements and log-transformed remotely sensed chl a concentration. Sea 
surface temperature (SST; 22.6% contribution), turbidity (22.2%), distance to 
major watersheds (17%), depth (14.5%), distance to minor watersheds (13.3%) and 
distance to the coast (10.4%) partly explained Māui dolphin distribution. We 
detected a match between predicted areas of high nearshore habitat suitability 
around North Island and historical sightings (76.2% overlap), thus highlighting 
potential areas of Māui dolphin recovery. Our study presents methods broadly 
applicable to distribution analyses, and demonstrates an evidence-based 
application toward managing Māui dolphin habitat.


Full text is available at:
http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v551/p261-275/

Or email me directly for a pdf copy
[email protected]



Best regards,

Solène

--
Solène Derville
PhD student - Marine Ecology
UMR Entropie - Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
Université Pierre et Marie Curie
Association Opération Cétacés
   -----------
101 Promenade Roger Laroque, BPA5
98848 Noumea cedex, New Caledonia
Phone: +687 912299
skype: solene.derville
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Solene_Derville

_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to