Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce our recent publication in Marine 
Biology:

Dwyer SL, Pawley MDM, Clement DM, Stockin KA. 2020. Modelling habitat use 
suggests static spatial exclusion zones are a non-optimal management tool for a 
highly mobile marine mammal. Marine Biology 167:62. 
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-020-3664-4

Abstract: Understanding how animals use the space in which they are distributed 
is important for guiding management decisions in conservation, especially where 
human disturbance can be spatially managed. Here we applied distribution 
modelling to examine common dolphin (Delphinus sp.) habitat use in the Hauraki 
Gulf (36°S, 175°E), New Zealand. Given the known importance of the area for 
foraging and nursing, we assessed which variables affect Delphinus occurrence 
based on generalised additive models (GAMs), and modelled probability of 
encounter. Behavioural information was included to assess habitat use by 
feeding and nursing groups and determine whether persistent hotspots for such 
activities could be identified and meaningfully used as a spatial management 
tool. Using data collected from dedicated boat surveys during 2010–2012, depth 
and sea surface temperature (SST) were frequently identified as important 
variables. Overall, seasonal predictive occurrence maps for the larger 
population resembled predictive maps of feeding groups more than nursery 
groups, suggesting prey availability has important implications for the 
distribution of Delphinus in this region. In this case, static spatial 
exclusions would not be the best management option as the core areas of use 
identified for these activities were large and shifted temporally. It appears 
that at the scale examined, most of the Hauraki Gulf is important for feeding 
and nursing rather than specific smaller regions being used for these 
functions. In cases where static management is not the optimal tool, as 
suggested here for a highly mobile species, a dynamic approach requires more 
than a boundary line on a map.

The article is available at 
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00227-020-3664-4 or please contact 
me ([email protected]) for a PDF.

Best wishes,
Sarah

-------------------------------------
Sarah Dwyer, PhD
Coastal-Marine Research Group
School of Natural and Computational Sciences
Massey University
Private Bag 102 904
North Shore
Auckland 0745
New Zealand

Mob:  +64 (0) 21 035 4749
Email: [email protected]
http://cmrg.massey.ac.nz
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