Dear colleagues,On behalf of my co-authors, I would like to announce the 
following new publication:
Benjamins, S., Dale, A., van Geel, N., & Wilson, B.(2016) Riding the tide: use 
of a moving tidal-stream habitat by harbourporpoises. Marine Ecology Progress 
Series 549: 275-288 + Supplementary Material. DOI: 10.3354/meps11677.
Abstract: Tidal-stream habitats present periodically fast-flowing, turbulent 
conditions. Evidence suggests that these conditions benefit top predators such 
as harbour porpoises Phocoena phocoena, presumably allowing them to optimise 
exploitation of prey resources. However, clear demonstration of this 
relationship is complicated by the fact that strong tidal flows often occur 
near-simultaneously across a wide area. The Great Race of the Gulf of 
Corryvreckan (western Scotland, UK) is a jetting tidal system where high-energy 
conditions persist across a broad range of tidal phases in a localised, moving 
patch of water. Porpoises can therefore actively enter or avoid this habitat, 
facilitating study of their usage of adjacent high- and low-energy 
environments. The distribution of harbour porpoises was studied using passive 
acoustic porpoise detectors (C‑PODs) deployed on static moorings (~35 d) and on 
Lagrangian drifters moving freely with the current (up to ~48 h). This dual 
approach provided complementary perspectives on porpoise presence. C-PODs 
moored in the path of the Great Race registered a significant increase in 
detections during the passing of the energetic tidal jet. Encounter durations 
recorded by drifting C-PODs were longer than those recorded by moored C-PODs, 
suggesting that porpoises tended to move downstream with the flow rather than 
remaining stationary relative to the seabed or moving upstream. The energetic, 
turbulent conditions of the Great Race are clearly attractive to porpoises, and 
they track its movement with time; however, their structured movements in 
response to the evolving tidal situation cannot simply be represented as a 
direct relationship between current speed and porpoise presence. 

The publication is available online 
(http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v549/p275-288/) or by request 
([email protected]).
Regards,
Steven Benjamins

 Dr. Steven BenjaminsResearchAssociate in Marine Vertebrate EcologySAMS 
(ScottishAssociation for Marine Science)
Oban
ArgyllScotlandUK
PA37 1QA

Tel: +44(0)1631-559449 (office)Tel:+44(0)1631-559000 (switchboard)
Fax: +44(0)1631-559001
E-mail address: [email protected]
http://www.sams.ac.uk



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