Dear all,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent publication: “*Playing
“hide and seek” with the Mediterranean monk seal: a citizen science dataset
reveals its distribution from molecular traces (eDNA)*”, Valsecchi, E.,
Tavecchia, G., Boldrocchi, G., Coppola E., Ramella D., Conte L., Blasi M.,
Bruno A. and Galli P.*.*  *Sci Rep* *13*, 2610 (2023).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-27835-6.



Abstract

Animal conservation relies on assessing the distribution and habitat use of
species, but for endangered/elusive animals this can prove difficult. The
Monk Seal, *Monachus monachus*, is one of the world’s most endangered
species of pinniped, and the only one endemic to the Mediterranean Sea.
During recent decades, direct observations have been few and scattered,
making it difficult to determine its distribution away from the Aegean Sea
(core distribution area of the post-decline relict population). This study
relies on environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis to detect the presence of the
Monk Seal in 135 samples collected in 120 locations of the central/western
Mediterranean Sea, spanning about 1500 km longitudinally and 1000 km
latitudinally. A recently described species-specific qPCR assay was used on
marine-water samples, mostly collected during 2021 by a Citizen Science
(CS) project. Positive detections occurred throughout the longitudinal
range, including the westernmost surveyed area (Balearic archipelago). The
distribution of the positive detections indicated six “hotspots”, mostly
overlapping with historical Monk Seal sites, suggesting that
habitat-specific characteristics play a fundamental role. We applied
single-season occupancy models to correct for detection probability and to
assess the importance of site-specific characteristics. The distance from
small islets and protected (or access-restricted) areas was correlated
negatively with the detection probability. This novel molecular approach,
applied here for the first time in an extensive CS study, proved its
potential as a tool for monitoring the distribution of this
endangered/elusive species.

The full article is available online here
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-27835-6 or as a PDF here
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-27835-6.pdf



Best wishes,

Elena Valsecchi, PhD.



University of Milano-Bicocca, Italy

elena.valsec...@unimib.it
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