Dear all,

My co-authors and I are happy to announce the publication of the following
research in Marine Ecology Progress Series:

*Predicting large-scale habitat suitability for cetaceans off Namibia using
MinxEnt*

Authors: P. De Rock, S.H. Elwen, J.P. Roux, R.H. Leeney, B.S. James, V.
Visser, M.J. Martin, T. Gridley

This is an output of research conducted by the Sea Search group and the
associated Namibian Dolphin Project.

*Abstract: *
Knowledge of the occurrence and distribution of cetaceans is particularly
important for conservation and management, but is still limited within
Namibian waters. We collated 3211 cetacean records from the Namibian
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) for the period 2008 to 2016 and applied the
principle of minimum cross entropy (MinxEnt) to predict habitat
suitability. MinxEnt is a generalised form of maximum entropy modelling
that allows incorporation of additional information such as sampling bias.
The habitat suitability of 9 cetacean species or species groups (5
odontocete species, 2 mysticete species and 2 taxonomic groups: pilot
whales *Globicephalus* spp. and balaenopterids Balaenopteridae spp.) were
predicted per season, in relation to environmental variables likely to
drive cetacean presence: sea surface temperature, chlorophyll *a*
concentration, water depth or distance to shore, seabed slope and habitat
complexity. The environmental variable which most frequently influenced
habitat suitability was depth, which was the main environmental driver for
bottlenose dolphin *Tursiops truncatus*, humpback *Megaptera novaeangliae*
and southern right whales *Eubalaena australis*. Further, Heaviside’s
dolphin *Cephalorhynchus heavisidii* habitat was best predicted by distance
to shore in all seasons, while common dolphin *Delphinus delphis* and the
balaenopterid group habitats were best predicted by habitat complexity, and
sperm whale *Physeter macrocephalus* habitats by chlorophyll *a*
concentration. We identify distinct spatial patterns in habitat suitability
for different species and provide baseline maps which can be used by
managers of wildlife resources.

The full article can be downloaded from this link:
https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v619/p149-167/

Kind regards,
Pauline De Rock
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