Dear All,

On behalf of all co-authors, I am happy to share our recent open access 
publication in PLOS ONE:

Hin V, de Roos AM, Benoit-Bird KJ, Claridge DE, DiMarzio N, et al. (2023) Using 
individual-based bioenergetic models to predict the aggregate effects of 
disturbance on populations: A case study with beaked whales and Navy sonar. 
PLOS ONE 18(8): e0290819.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290819

Abstract:

Anthropogenic activities can lead to changes in animal behavior. Predicting 
population consequences of these behavioral changes requires integrating 
short-term individual responses into models that forecast population dynamics 
across multiple generations. This is especially challenging for long-lived 
animals, because of the different time scales involved. Beaked whales are a 
group of deep-diving odontocete whales that respond behaviorally when exposed 
to military mid-frequency active sonar (MFAS), but the effect of these 
nonlethal responses on beaked whale populations is unknown. Population 
consequences of aggregate exposure to MFAS was assessed for two beaked whale 
populations that are regularly present on U.S. Navy training ranges where MFAS 
is frequently used. Our approach integrates a wide range of data sources, 
including telemetry data, information on spatial variation in habitat quality, 
passive acoustic data on the temporal pattern of sonar use and its relationship 
to beaked whale foraging activity, into an individual-based model with a 
dynamic bioenergetic module that governs individual life history. The predicted 
effect of disturbance from MFAS on population abundance ranged between 
population extinction to a slight increase in population abundance. These 
effects were driven by the interaction between the temporal pattern of MFAS 
use, baseline movement patterns, the spatial distribution of prey, the nature 
of beaked whale behavioral response to MFAS and the top-down impact of whale 
foraging on prey abundance. Based on these findings, we provide recommendations 
for monitoring of marine mammal populations and highlight key uncertainties to 
help guide future directions for assessing population impacts of nonlethal 
disturbance for these and other long-lived animals.

Kind regards,

Vincent Hin

---------------------------------------------------------------------
Vincent Hin, PhD
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Vincent-Hin-2
Wageningen Marine Research
IJmuiden, The Netherlands
---------------------------------------------------------------------


_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to