Dear MARMAM community,


My coauthors and I are happy to share our recent publication modeling
ship-strike risk to blue, fin, humpback, and sperm whales across the
world's oceans.



Nisi A.C., Welch H., Brodie S., Leiphardt C., Rhodes R., Hazen E.L.,
Redfern J.V., Branch T.A., Barreto A.S., Calambokidis J., Clavelle T.,
Dares L., de Vos A., Gero S., Jackson J.A., Kenney R.D., Kroodsma D.,
Leaper R., McCauley D.J., Moore S., Ovsyanikova E., Panigada S., Robinson
C.V., White T., Wilson J., Abrahms B.  Ship collision risk threatens whales
across the world’s oceans. *Science*386,870-875 (2024).
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adp1950


Abstract:

After the near-complete cessation of commercial whaling, ship collisions
have emerged as a primary threat to large whales, but knowledge of
collision risk is lacking across most of the world’s oceans. We compiled a
dataset of 435,000 whale locations to generate global distribution models
for four globally ranging species. We then combined >35 billion positions
from 176,000 ships to produce a global estimate of whale-ship collision
risk. Shipping occurs across 92% of whale ranges, and <7% of risk hotspots
contain management strategies to reduce collisions. Full coverage of
hotspots could be achieved by expanding management over only 2.6% of the
ocean’s surface. These inferences support the continued recovery of large
whales against the backdrop of a rapidly growing shipping industry.



If you have any questions, please feel free to get in touch - my email is
an...@uw.edu.



Best,

Anna

--
Anna Nisi, PhD
Postdoctoral Scholar
University of Washington
Email: an...@uw.edu
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