Dear all,

My coauthors and I would like to announce the following publication in journal 
of Marine Policy:

Crossing boundaries for cetacean conservation: Setting research priorities to 
guide management of harbour porpoises
Lonneke L. IJsseldijk, Mariel T.I. ten Doeschate, Nicholas J. Davison, Andrea 
Gröne & Andrew C. Brownlow

Abstract: Effective management of natural resources involves a 
multidisciplinary perspective to address complex issues in data 
poor-environments. With mobile species that do not conform to human-defined 
borders a cross-boundary approach is essential. There is a continuing concern 
of ecological sustainability of marine environments, which demands monitoring 
of ecosystem indicators. Such indicators are increasingly derived from 
monitoring sentinel species. Harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) are included 
as indicator species in several national and international agreements. 
Increasing exposure to anthropogenic stressors may impact harbour porpoise 
populations. To investigate these risks, a better understanding of threats and 
their effect is required. This study aimed to identify current knowledge gaps, 
to predict future pressures or threats, and to define useful conservation 
indicators to facilitate future research on harbour porpoises in the North Sea, 
through expert elicitation gained in a two-round Delphi approach. The three 
most important knowledge gaps addressed were bycatch, population dynamics, and 
the cumulative effects of multiple stressors. Bycatch was predicted as the 
highest concern for porpoises in the next 20 years, followed by chemical and 
noise pollution, respectively. A list of essential indicators aiming to 
increase understanding of harbour porpoises' health status was established and 
studying causes of death, distribution, abundance, habitat use and diet 
composition were scored as most relevant. These results should guide research 
focus and management objectives of harbour porpoise populations and the study 
design could be translated to serve managers in other geographical areas aiming 
to identify knowledge gaps and defining research priorities for other wildlife 
species.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2018.07.006

The full text can be downloaded here: 
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0308597X18301799#bib28
For those unable to access the publication, I would be happy to provide the PDF 
file.

Kind regards,
Lonneke IJsseldijk

Lonneke L. IJsseldijk, MSc
Project Manager Cetacean Research
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Utrecht University
Department of Pathobiology

T +31 30 253 5312, M +31 6 244 556 98
Website: http://www.uu.nl/strandingsonderzoek
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/strandingresearch/

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