Dear colleagues and MARMAM Members,

On behalf of my co-authors I am pleased to share our recent publication in PLOS 
ONE:

Time and tide: Seasonal, diel and tidal rhythms in Wadden Sea Harbour porpoises 
(Phocoena phocoena) 
<https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0213348>
Zein B, Woelfing B, Dähne M, Schaffeld T, Ludwig S, et al. (2019) Time and 
tide: Seasonal, diel and tidal rhythms in Wadden Sea Harbour porpoises 
(Phocoena phocoena). PLOS ONE 14(3): e0213348

Abstract:
Odontocetes have evolved a rich diversity of prey- and habitat-specific 
foraging strategies, which allows them to feed opportunistically on locally and 
temporally abundant prey. While habitat-specific foraging strategies have been 
documented for some odontocete species, this is less known for the harbour 
porpoise (Phocoena phocoena). We collected multiple years of acoustic data 
using echolocation click loggers to analyse porpoise occurrence and buzzing 
behaviour, indicating feeding, in the German Wadden Sea (North Sea). Seasonal, 
diel and tidal effects were studied using Generalised Estimating Equations 
(GEE-GAMs). Locally season, time of day and tidal time significantly influenced 
the probability of porpoise detections and detection of foraging sequences 
(buzzes). Hunting strategies, and therefore frequency of buzzes, were likely 
affected by prey distribution and large differences between POD locations 
indicated that porpoises used highly specific behaviour adapted to tide and 
time of day to efficiently feed on the available prey. Strong seasonal and 
spatial variation in diel and tidal effects underline the importance of 
long-term observations. Studies on porpoise behaviour are often based on 
short-term observations and might rather reflect a seasonal than a general 
pattern. The results of this study show clearly that significant changes in 
porpoise behaviour can be found in short and long-term observations. Here some 
features are based on short term determinants and others are stable over years 
and care should be taken about drawing general conclusions based on local 
patterns. Highly variable spatio-temporal patterns indicate a high flexibility 
of porpoises in a highly variable environment and address a challenge for 
complex conservation management plans.


The open-access paper can be downloaded here: 
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0213348.
Kind regards,
Tobias Schaffeld
..............................................................................................................................................................................
Tobias Schaffeld
Institute for Terrestrial and Aquatic Wildlife Research (ITAW)
University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover, Foundation
Werftstr. 6 / 25761 Büsum / Germany
Tel  +49 511 856 8164 / Fax +49 511 856-8181
http://www.tiho-hannover.de/kliniken-institute/institute/institut-fuer-terrestrische-und-aquatische-wildtierforschung/
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