Dear MARMAM community,

My coauthors and I are pleased to announce the publication of our article in
Frontiers in Marine Science.

Tort Castro B, Prieto González R, O’Callaghan SA, Dominguez Rein-Loring P
and Degollada Bastos E (2022) Ship Strike Risk for Fin Whales (Balaenoptera
physalus) Off the Garraf coast, Northwest Mediterranean Sea. Front. Mar.
Sci. 9:867287. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2022.867287

Abstract: Ship strikes are a widespread conservation issue for many
cetacean species globally. Population level impacts depend on the
occurrence and severity of collisions, which may lead to life altering
injuries or fatalities. Such impacts are a major concern for large,
long-lived, and reproductively slow species like the fin whale. Since 2014,
a seasonal feeding aggregation of fin whales has been monitored from
February to June off the Catalan coast (Spain), in the northwest
Mediterranean Sea. Oceanographical factors influence the occurrence and
high density of krill within submarine canyons along the continental shelf,
resulting in high whale abundance within a small spatial area. The study
area extends 37 km offshore across a 1,944 km2 marine strip situated
between the towns of Torredembarra and Castelldefels. This fin whale
feeding ground is exposed to high density marine vessel traffic, given its
location between the northern Mediterranean shipping lane, which links
Barcelona and Tarragona Ports to the Atlantic Ocean and wider Mediterranean
Basin. Ship strikes represent the greatest conservation threat for fin
whales in the Mediterranean Sea. At least four fin whales have been found
dead in Barcelona Port since 1986 due to ship strikes and seven live whales
have been documented with injuries in the study area since 2018. Fin whale
distribution was mapped with known high-risk marine vessels’ (cargo, tanker
and passenger vessels) shipping lanes. Vessel density and shipping lanes
characterised by speed were considered. Collision risk was estimated
monthly based on the predicted fin whale occurrence and traffic density.
Several shipping lanes crossed the fin whale feeding habitat every month
with an average speed of 15 kn. Cargo vessels displayed the highest
ship-strike risk during April, overlapping with the peak of fin whale
sightings in the critical feeding area. Slower vessel speeds (8 kn) in
waters <200 m depth or along the continental shelf should be implemented
along the Catalan coast, during the whale season. These suggestions should
be applied into the Barcelona Port transport separation scheme. Ship strike
risk for this species will persist unless active management plans are
adapted in the region to mitigate its risk.


The article is open-access and available at:
Frontiers | Ship Strike Risk for Fin Whales (Balaenoptera physalus) Off the
Garraf coast, Northwest Mediterranean Sea | Marine Science (frontiersin.org)
<https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.867287/full>

Best regards,

Beatriu Tort
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to