Dear Marine Mammal Community,

We are happy to share our recently published open access article in
Frontiers in Marine Science:

Factheu C, Rycyk AM, Keith-Diagne LW, Kekeunou S, Ramos EA, Kikuchi M and
Takoukam Kamla A (2023) Acoustic methods improve the detection of the
endangered African manatee. Front. Mar. Sci. 9:1032464.

doi: 10.3389/fmars.2022.1032464

Abstract:

The African manatee (Trichechus senegalensis) is an elusive,
data-deficient, and endangered species which inhabits marine and freshwater
systems throughout Western and Central Africa. A major challenge in
understanding the species ecology and distribution is the difficulty in
detecting it using traditional visual surveys. The recent invasion of Giant
Salvinia (Salvinia molesta) at the most important site for the species in
Cameroon further limits their detectability and may restrict their
movements and habitat use. To investigate methods’ effectiveness in
detecting African manatees, we conducted monthly vessel surveys from which
visual point scans, 360° sonar scans, and passive acoustic monitoring were
conducted simultaneously at ten locations and over 12 months in Lake Ossa,
Cameroon. Manatee detection frequency was calculated for each method and
the influence of some environmental conditions on the methods’
effectiveness and manatee detection likelihood was assessed by fitting a
binary logistic regression to our data. Detection frequencies were
significantly different between methods (p < 0.01) with passive acoustics
being the most successful (24.17%; n = 120), followed by the 360° sonar
scan (11.67%; n = 120), and the visual point scan (3.33%; n = 120). The
likelihood of detecting manatees in Lake Ossa was significantly influenced
by water depth (p = 0.02) and transparency (p < 0.01). It was more likely
to detect manatees in shallower water depths and higher water transparency.
Passive acoustic detections were more effective in uninvaded areas of the
Lake. We recommend using passive acoustics to enhance African manatee
detections in future surveys.

Best regards,

Clinton.


--
Clinton Factheu, Msc.
PhD Student, University of Yaoundé 1, Cameroon.
Address: BP 812, Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Phone: +237 676601221 / +237 690853505
Twitter: @factheu
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