Dear MARMAM community,
My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the publication of a new study in 
Journal of Applied Ecology:
Carter et al. At-sea distribution of seals on the Northwest European Shelf: 
Towards transboundary conservation and management.

The study presents at-sea distribution maps for seven European countries (UK, 
France, Ireland, Belgium, Netherlands, Germany and Denmark) alongside some 
additional resources for the UK (distribution maps for the UK constituent 
nations and dependencies, Seal Monitoring Units and Special Areas of 
Conservation). In addition to the maps, we present some analysis of 
transboundary movements and outline important considerations for offshore 
developments and management strategies.
Link to paper: 
https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2664.70236
Link to datasets: 
https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/datasets/datasets-from-carter-et-al-at-sea-distribution-of-seals-on-the-no/

Abstract:
Quantifying and mitigating transboundary effects of anthropogenic activity is a 
key challenge in environmental management, particularly for wide-ranging 
species such as large predators, fish and migratory birds, relying on habitats 
across multiple national jurisdictions. This challenge is especially complex in 
marine ecosystems, where the movement of species and impacts across borders is 
largely unobserved. Central-place foragers, such as pinnipeds and seabirds, 
exemplify this complexity: abundance is typically assessed on local (regional 
or national) scales on land, yet at-sea movements and drivers of abundance 
occur on broader transboundary scales. Resolving this mismatch is critical to 
effective conservation, especially in areas such as the Northwest European 
Shelf (NWES), which features globally important predator populations (including 
two pinniped species) alongside growing anthropogenic pressures and a mosaic of 
national maritime borders. We model an unprecedented GPS dataset from 236 grey 
(Halichoerus grypus) and 606 harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) tracked in waters 
of seven countries across the NWES (United Kingdom, Ireland, France, Belgium, 
Netherlands, Germany and Denmark). Using regional habitat association models, 
we generate at-sea distribution estimates for both species at 5?km resolution, 
scaled to haulout counts, producing country-specific and NWES-wide density 
maps. Analysis of the extent to which seals making foraging trips from one 
country occupy the Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) of other countries revealed 
substantial transboundary overlap, particularly for grey seals, and harbour 
seals in the southern North Sea. A case study apportioning grey seal density 
within three adjacent offshore marine protected areas in different EEZs 
revealed that, where total density in a given area is required, overlooking 
transboundary distribution can underrepresent numbers by an order of magnitude. 
This study provides the first comprehensive, regionally scalable distribution 
estimates for pinnipeds across the NWES and its constituent countries. The 
modelling framework is adaptable to other central-place and migratory species, 
supporting transboundary biodiversity assessments and international 
conservation policy. We discuss common limitations and misconceptions of 
species distribution estimates, highlight priorities for future work and 
underscore the need for transboundary efforts to manage wide-ranging species, 
providing a foundation for future ecological modelling and decision-making 
across shared ecosystems.

Best wishes,
<http://intheloop.newsweaver.com/intheloop/17cae036ofohmxeaknevkb/external?a=6&p=1171674&t=10173>Dr
 Matt Carter
Research Fellow
Sea Mammal Research Unit
School of Biology
University of St Andrews
KY16 8LB

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