Dear colleagues,
I am pleased and honoured, on behalf of my coauthors, to announce our new paper 
on the ecology of Black Sea harbour porpoises:

Seasonal and diel patterns in Black Sea harbour porpoise acoustic activity in 
2020–2022

Julia Ivanchikova, Nick Tregenza, Dimitar Popov, Galina Meshkova, 
Romulus-Marian Paiu, Costin Timofte, Ayaka Amaha Öztürk, Arda M. Tonay, Ayhan 
Dede, Uğur Özsandıkçı, Natia Kopaliani, Davit Dekanoidze, Zurab Gurielidze, 
Karina Vishnyakova, Philip S. Hammond, Pavel Gol'din (2024) Ecology and 
Evolution. 2024;14:e70182.  https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70182

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ece3.70182

  The Black Sea is a semi-enclosed inland sea with an unevenly distributed 
extensive coastal shelf area and anoxic deep waters. It is inhabited by common 
and bottlenose dolphins, as well as harbour porpoises, all represented by local 
subspecies.
  Between September 2020 and October 2022, 19 F-PODs deployed by research teams 
from Bulgaria, Georgia, Romania, Türkiye and Ukraine collected data on acoustic 
activity of Black Sea harbour porpoises.
  Strong seasonal and diel patterns were found, which varied in three regions. 
In the south-eastern part of the Black Sea, harbour porpoise acoustic activity 
was higher from January to May, with a peak in April. This pattern agrees with 
the seasonal anchovy migration from the winter spawning grounds in warmer 
waters in the south-eastern region to feeding grounds on the productive shallow 
north-west shelf.
  The diel pattern showed strong nocturnal acoustic activity, which is 
consistent with anchovy vertical migration. Porpoises on the western side of 
the Black Sea exhibited a bimodal seasonal pattern in acoustic activity, with a 
larger peak in April and a smaller one in October. Diel activity was primarily 
nocturnal. On the north-west shelf, harbour porpoise acoustic activity was 
mostly recorded during the warm period from April to October. The diel pattern 
showed activity mainly during daylight with two peaks: a smaller one 
approximately at dawn and a larger one at dusk. This pattern is similar to the 
vertical migrations of sprat.
  Overall, the results of the study were consistent with the prey being an 
important driver of seasonal and diel dynamics of harbour porpoise acoustic 
activity.

Feel free to contact me on any question regarding this research 
(julia.ivanchik...@gmail.com).





Julia Ivanchikova

PhD | Research Assistant


Sea Mammal Research Unit

Scottish Oceans Institute

University of St Andrews

KY16 8LB

Scotland


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