Dear all,

We are pleased to announce the publication of the following paper:


Mannocci, L., Monestiez, P., Spitz, J., Ridoux, V. (2015). Extrapolating 
cetacean densities beyond surveyed regions: habitat-based predictions in the 
circumtropical belt. Journal of Biogeography.  DOI:10.1111/jbi.12530


ABSTRACT
Aim

Our knowledge of cetacean distributions is impeded by large data-gaps 
worldwide, particularly at tropical latitudes. This study aims to (1) find 
generic relationships between cetaceans and their habitats in a range of 
tropical waters, and (2) extrapolate cetacean densities in a circumtropical 
belt extending far beyond surveyed regions.
Location

Pelagic, circumtropical.
Methods

Aerial surveys were conducted over three regions in the tropical Atlantic 
(132,000 km2), Indian (1.4 million km2) and Pacific (1.4 million km2)
oceans. Three cetacean guilds were studied (Delphininae, Globicephalinae and 
sperm and beaked whales). For each guild, a generalized additive model was 
fitted using sightings recorded in all three regions and 14 candidate 
environmental predictors. Cetacean densities were tentatively extrapolated over 
a circumtropical belt, excluding waters where environmental characteristics 
departed from those encountered in the surveyed regions.
Results

Each cetacean guild exhibited a relationship with the primary production and 
depth of the minimum dissolved oxygen concentration. Delphininae
also showed a relationship with the dominant phytoplankton group. The 
prediction envelopes were primarily constrained by water temperature. 
Circumtropical extrapolations of Delphininae and Globicephalinae were 
contrasted between ocean basins, with high densities predicted in the 
equatorial waters of the three ocean basins. The predicted densities of sperm 
and beaked whales were lower and more uniform across the circumtropical belt 
than for the other two guilds.
Main conclusions

Our modelling approach represents a good analytical solution to predicting 
cetacean population densities in poorly documented tropical
waters. Future data collection should concentrate on areas where environmental 
characteristics were not encountered in our survey regions and where the 
predicted densities were the most uncertain. By highlighting cetacean hotspots 
far beyond waters under national jurisdiction, this study can provide guidance 
for the delimitation of Ecologically and Biologically Significant Marine Areas.


The article is now available online at: 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jbi.12530/full


Please contact me at [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> if 
you would like a PDF copy or have any questions!


Best regards,


Laura Mannocci


Postdoctoral Associate

Marine Geospatial Ecology Lab

Nicholas School of the Environment

Duke University

_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to