Dear MARMAMers,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce our recent publication in the 
journal Royal Society Open Science which has identified, via expert opinion, 
valuable and practical indicators for assessing stranded cetacean welfare and 
survival likelihood.

Boys, R.M.; Beausoleil, N.J.; Pawley, M.D.M.; Littlewood, K.E.; Betty, E.L.; 
Stockin, K.A. Identification of potential welfare and survival indicators for 
stranded cetaceans through international, interdisciplinary expert opinion. 
Royal Society Open Science 2022, 9: 220646.

Abstract:
Management of live cetacean strandings generally focuses on refloating animals, 
yet there is a lack of scientific data to inform decision-making. Valid 
indicators that are practical to measure are needed to assess welfare status 
and survival likelihood for stranded cetaceans. The Delphi method was applied 
to gather international and interdisciplinary expert opinion to provide face 
validity to potential indicators of stranded cetacean welfare and survival 
likelihood. Two online questionnaires were conducted. In the first 
questionnaire these experts identified potential indicators of stranded 
cetacean welfare and survival likelihood. These indicators were subsequently 
scored by the same experts in questionnaire two, based on their value for 
assessing welfare/survival likelihood and being practical to measure. 
Indicators considered valuable and practical for assessing welfare and survival 
likelihood at strandings included animal-based indices of body and skin 
condition, signs of physical trauma, respiration rate and various behaviours. 
Resource-/management-based indicators related mainly to human intervention and 
should be correlated with animal-based indices to provide relevant evaluations. 
Importantly, inextricable links between welfare and survival for stranded 
cetaceans are emphasized, with 90% of indicators being similar for both. 
Investigations into these indicators should be conducted to develop a 
practical, science-based assessment framework to inform decision-making during 
stranding events.

The paper is freely available open access here: 
https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.220646

Please do contact me if you have any questions.

Thank you very much,
Rebecca

On behalf of all the co-authors



-------------------------------------------------------------

Rebecca M Boys



Marine Biologist

PhD Student

Cetacean Ecology Research Group

School of Natural Sciences

Massey University

Auckland

New Zealand

[cid:456f783e-547f-42ca-b1a9-b15890d05bc5]<https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Rebecca_Boys>
 [cid:f47b6b6c-ca23-4872-99ad-facec477ac33] 
<https://scholar.google.co.nz/citations?hl=en&user=7rHpOpMAAAAJ> 
[cid:ca907944-972e-424c-a86c-b1cbf8df06e6] <https://twitter.com/RebeccaMBoys> 
[cid:0f5ff4d2-df99-460a-8cee-0aa202a9da18] 
<https://www.facebook.com/CetaceanEcologyOrg/?__xts__[0]=68.ARBKlWSLR-YC7KHNrW51KXYC8RqNWn5mtIpZGlhILsMi73gubXw7i0iNq-bMfLim8n7PnUX74GpGPXJqVJBIxqdfqVAvHxEd2En0qyW6mKYd9Q30p8kEFIBWKPFgrh4uEh6ISXy5ihiNbt8H1yEWprZQN4kZDRW8gPSk6TMiyNoF-uJ0o1uPoosrGMKBKGD8sc4K3SJPD2e-mWqDxZOc_aY670ngZVZm6YlpZzvKj_r_vh_aHHeSQuS7lgktu6h7HwKL_pEGombnfjc6z3ekwEF4Szn9mLA-y643tiUxNSQiFyiDyOzrVFqnT34Ctus2d0A9GXJMVBvnw7lCKoNnEq4kbA>
 [cid:33618201-7110-41a9-813d-e0046e1f00b2] 
<https://www.massey.ac.nz/massey/explore/research/animal-veterinary/animal/marine/marine_home.cfm>
[cid:74e34c07-2f5b-4a5c-85f1-bf7618d48f6d]
www.cetaceanecology.org/<https://www.cetaceanecology.org/>


Australia and New Zealand Student Chapter SMM Committee member

European Cetacean Society National Contact Person for New Zealand



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