Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of all the co-authors and I, I am very pleased to share our recent 
publication entitled "Seasonal and Diurnal Patterns of Harbor Porpoise 
(Phocoena phocoena) Behavior and the Disruptive Effects of Vessel Presence in a 
High-Traffic Coastal Habitat" , published in Marine Mammal Science.

Authors:

Rachel L. Lennon, Shannon Merkle,  Jonas Teilmann, Lorenzo Scala, Chris 
Pierpoint, Victoria Hobson


Abstract:

Chronic anthropogenic activity is an ongoing threat to the marine environment 
and presents unique challenges in shallow, coastal habitats where harbor 
porpoises reside. Harbor porpoises have high metabolic needs and are highly 
susceptible to negative environmental factors; however, no long-term studies 
have been conducted on wild populations to quantify the negative impacts of 
vessel presence on their behavior. To evaluate this impact on harbor porpoises 
in the Little Belt, Denmark, data from a static hydrophone array were used to 
distinguish porpoise click train events and quantify buzzes (vocalizations with 
an inter-click interval < 10 ms), used as an indication of foraging and social 
behavior, and Automated Identification System data were collected to identify 
vessels within a 3000 m radius of the study site. Using generalized additive 
models, we showed that harbor porpoises were most active during the night in 
summer months but most often overlapped with vessels during the day in the 
summer. Generalized linear models showed that harbor porpoise buzz rate was 
significantly reduced in the presence of vessels, particularly during daylight 
hours in the summer when vessel traffic peaked. These results suggest that 
porpoise foraging and socializing are negatively affected by vessel presence. 
Furthermore, high porpoise density, which is likely driven by prey availability 
as found in other studies, may prevent animals from moving to less trafficked 
areas. Mitigation measures to reduce impacts should be considered to help 
reduce the ongoing decline in the studied population.


You can find the full publication (open access) here: 
https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.70123

Please do reach out if you have any questions. Happy reading!


Best wishes,

Rachel


Rachel Lennon (She/Her)
PhD Researcher | Marine Animal Health

Scottish Marine Animal Stranding Scheme (SMASS)
School of Biodiversity, One Health and Veterinary Medicine
University of Glasgow | Graham Kerr | Room 321
BlueSky: @@rachlenn.bsky.social‬ | Tel: 07955233464
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