Dear Marmam,

We are pleased to share with you our new open-access paper published in 
Diversity and distributions.

Title: Static species distribution models in the marine realm: The case of 
baleen whales in the Southern Ocean
Authors: Ahmed El-Gabbas, Ilse Van Opzeeland, Elke Burkhardt, Olaf Boebel
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ddi.13300 [open-access]


Abstract:

Aim: Information on the spatio-temporal distribution of marine species is 
essential for developing proactive management strategies. However, sufficient 
information is seldom available at large spatial scales, particularly in polar 
areas. The Southern Ocean (SO) represents a critical habitat for various 
species, particularly migratory baleen whales. Still, the SO’s remoteness and 
sea ice coverage disallow obtaining sufficient information on baleen whale 
distribution and niche preference. Here, we used presence-only species 
distribution models to predict the circumantarctic habitat suitability of 
baleen whales and identify important predictors affecting their distribution.
Location: The Southern Ocean (SO).
Methods: We used Maxent to model habitat suitability for Antarctic minke, 
Antarctic blue, fin and humpback whales. Our models employ extensive 
circumantarctic data and carefully prepared predictors describing the SO’s 
environment and two spatial sampling bias correction options. Species-specific 
spatial-block cross-validation was used to optimize model complexity and for 
spatially independent model evaluation.
Results: Model performance was high on cross-validation, with generally little 
predicted uncertainty. The most important predictors were derived from sea ice, 
particularly seasonal mean and variability of sea ice concentration and 
distance to the sea ice edge.
Main conclusions: Our models support the usefulness of presence-only models as 
a cost-effective tool in the marine realm, particularly for studying the 
migratory whales’ distribution. However, we found discrepancies between our 
results and (within) results of similar studies, mainly due to using different 
species data quality and quantity, different study area extent and 
methodological reasons. We further highlight the limitations of implementing 
static distribution models in the highly dynamic marine realm. Dynamic models, 
which relate species information to environmental conditions contemporaneous to 
species occurrences, can predict near-real-time habitat suitability, necessary 
for dynamic management. Nevertheless, obtaining sufficient species and 
environmental predictors at high spatio-temporal resolution, necessary for 
dynamic models, can be challenging from polar regions.

Regards
Ahmed

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dr. Ahmed El-Gabbas,
Ocean Acoustics Lab,
Alfred-Wegener-Institut
Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar und Meeresforschung
[cid:d4458565-b46e-4d8c-8c9c-da329e8a2f78]
My Website:  https://elgabbas.netlify.app/
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