On behalf of my co-author and myself, I am delighted to bring to your attention 
the publication of our last research published by the scientific journal 
Ecological Indicators.  

Diaz Lopez B, Methion S, (2019) Habitat drivers of endangered rorqual whales in 
a highly impacted upwelling region. Ecological Indicators 103: 610-616. 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolind.2019.04.038

Abstract
Recent studies show that human impacts on marine ecosystems are threatening 
marine biodiversity. A greater emphasis on predicting how predators might 
respond to changes in the marine environment is needed because the effects of 
human activities are spatially heterogeneous. Here we analyse rorqual whales 
distribution data in a highly impacted upwelling region (North-western Iberian 
coast, Spain). Using a multi-model inference approach this study assesses the 
habitat drivers of the fine-scale distribution of three endangered whale 
species (blue, fin and sei whales) as a way to better understand how rorqual 
whales might respond to human-induced changes in the coastal ecosystem. The 
unequal use of available habitat, concentrated at the edge of the continental 
slope (200m depth and strong bottom slope gradient) in areas with a 
south-easterly coastal orientation, showed that rorqual whales presented a 
fine-scale pattern of habitat selection in response to prey availability. 
Rorqual whales’ distribution is affected by the coastal upwelling regime of the 
Iberian Peninsula, which is known to be under impact of climate change. 
Therefore, responses of rorqual whales to upwelling changes might be manifested 
at the population level such as shifts in abundance and distribution. This 
information contributes to extend the scant information available about the 
presence of these species in the North-east Atlantic. Our findings provide 
management agencies with an opportunity to devise and implement adequate 
adaptation measures which may ameliorate adverse effects critical for the 
conservation of rorquals in a changing climate.

The article can be found and download in the following link: 
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1470160X19302845?via%3Dihub

Please feel free to contact me for further questions or to request a pdf at: 
br...@thebdri.com

Bruno Diaz Lopez Ph.D
Chief biologist and Director
The Bottlenose Dolphin Research Institute BDRI
Avenida Beiramar 192, O Grove 36980, Pontevedra, Spain
www.thebdri.com
0034 684248552

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