Dear colleagues,

It is with great pleasure that my coauthor and I would like to share our most 
recent publication:

Notarbartolo di Sciara G., Kotomatas S. 2016. Are Mediterranean monk seals, 
Monachus monachus, being left to save themselves from extinction? In: G. 
Notarbartolo di Sciara, M. Podestà, B.E. Curry (Editors), Mediterranean marine 
mammal ecology and conservation. Advances in Marine Biology 75:361-388. 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/bs.amb.2016.08.004

Abstract: Mediterranean monk seals (Monachus monachus), amongst the most 
endangered marine mammals, are showing localised signs of recovery warranting 
their recent down-listing, from Critically Endangered to Endangered, on the 
International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List. This, 
however, cannot be taken as a reason for complacency, as the species’ condition 
is still very critical, having been extirpated from most of its historical 
range. Monk seals within the Mediterranean, a ‘unit to conserve’ separate from 
Atlantic conspecifics, were once widely distributed throughout the 
Mediterranean Sea, with their range also extending into the Sea of Marmara and 
the Black Sea. Today breeding nuclei persist only in the northeastern portion 
of the region, in Greek, Turkish and Cypriot waters. The main reasons for their 
decline include deliberate killing and human encroachment of their critical 
habitat. Past conservation efforts have mostly failed due to the inability of 
implementing institutional commitments, lack of coordination and continuity of 
efforts and insufficient consideration of the socioeconomic implications of 
conserving monk seals. Yet the small reversal of the species’ decline that has 
been observed in Greece may have resulted from conservation efforts by civil 
society, combined with ongoing societal change within the local communities 
coexisting with the seals. The inaccessibility of large portions of monk seal 
habitat in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea may also have contributed, by offering 
to the monk seals a refuge from persecution and encroachment. Despite continued 
threats to monk seals, conservation activities at the local scale that utilise 
lessons learned from previous failures and successes could secure the survival 
of the largest Mediterranean colony of monk seals, while also providing a model 
to support the species’ recovery in other portions of its former range.

The paper can be accessed from 
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0065288116300153 
<http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S006528811630013X>

Alternatively, please send PDF requests to [email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]>

All the best,

Giuseppe Notarbartolo di Sciara


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