My coauthors and I are pleased to announce the following open access 
publication, which is available at the link below: "Exploring effects of 
vessels on walrus behaviors using telemetry, automatic identification system 
data and matching."

https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4433

Abstract
Arctic marine mammals have had little exposure to vessel traffic and potential 
associated disturbance, but sea ice loss has increased accessibility of Arctic 
waters to vessels. Vessel disturbance could influence marine mammal population 
dynamics by altering behavioral activity budgets that affect energy balance, 
which in turn can affect birth and death rates. As an initial step in
studying these linkages, we conducted the first comprehensive analysis to 
evaluate the effects of vessel exposure on Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus 
divergens) behaviors. We obtained >120,000 h of location and behavior 
(foraging, in-water not foraging, and hauled out) data from 218 
satellite-tagged walruses and linked them to vessel locations from the marine 
automatic
identification system (AIS). This yielded 206 vessel-exposed walrus telemetry 
hours for comparison to unexposed hours, which we used to assess if vessel 
exposure altered walrus behavior. We developed a filter to account for 
misclassification of vessel exposure of telemetered walruses. Then we tested 
for an effect of vessel exposure on walrus behaviors using a combination of
exact and propensity score-based matching to account for confounding 
covariates, and we conducted statistical power analyses. We did not detect an 
effect of vessel exposure on walrus behaviors even when statistical power was 
high (i.e., for foraging walruses), which may have been due to the sample 
size-driven need to define vessel presence within a larger than desired 
distance (15-km measured radius) around a walrus. Although this study did not 
determine at what distance vessel exposure affects walrus behaviors, it 
provided an upper bound on the distance at which the vessels encountered may 
disturb foraging
walruses. When more situation-specific information is lacking, this distance 
could be used as a conservative buffer to maintain between vessels and areas of 
high use by foraging walruses. Studies on behavioral consequences of closer 
proximities between walruses and vessels are needed, and our assessments of 
misclassification rates and statistical power can be used for future studies. 
We demonstrated that analytical approaches such as matching, which are rarely 
used in wildlife studies, are particularly useful for testing hypotheses with 
observational data.

Citation: Taylor, Rebecca L., Chadwick V. Jay, William S. Beatty, Anthony S. 
Fischbach, Lori T. Quakenbush, and Justin A. Crawford. 2023. “Exploring Effects 
of Vessels on Walrus Behaviors Using Telemetry, Automatic Identification System 
Data and Matching.”
Ecosphere 14(3): e4433. https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.4433


Rebecca Taylor
Research Statistician
Alaska Science Center
U. S. Geological Survey
(907) 786-7004

Pronouns: She/her
Please note I sometimes send and answer email outside normal work hours.
This helps me with my schedule but is not intended to pressure others to do the 
same.
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