Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to share our new publication titled ''*Stomach content
analysis reveals insights into the feeding ecology of coastal cetaceans in
Sarawak, Malaysia*''.

Abstract:
This study examined the stomach contents of seven Indo-Pacific finless
porpoises (*Neophocaena phocaenoides*), two Irrawaddy dolphins (*Orcaella
brevirostris*), and one Indo-Pacific humpback dolphin (*Sousa chinensis*)
retrieved from stranding and bycatch events along the Sarawak coastline.
>From these stomach contents, 170 fish, 150 cephalopod, and six crustacean
loose prey items were found, representing 23 prey species from 18 families.
Prey item importance was assessed using the percentage by number and
percentage by frequency of occurrence methods as well as a modified index
of relative importance. The diet of finless porpoises comprised 64%
cephalopods, 33% fish and 3% crustaceans. The prey items found in Irrawaddy
dolphins stomachs comprised 99% fish and 1% cephalopods. All three cetacean
species were found to feed on fish across a wide range of trophic levels.
Finless porpoises and Irrawaddy dolphins shared the most numerically
important fish family, the Engraulidae (anchovies). Meanwhile, the Ariidae
(catfish) family was the most numerically important fish family for the
humpback dolphin. A few prey species found in the stomach contents (i.e.
anchovies, drums or croakers, marine catfish and false trevally) are
commercially important fish species in Sarawak. This overlap, coupled with
previous studies that demonstrate co-occurrence of cetacean hotspots and
artisanal and commercial fishing effort, suggests a high likelihood of
cetacean-fisheries interactions and elevated risk of cetacean entanglement
and mortality. This is a serious concern, as humpback dolphins and finless
porpoises are considered Vulnerable and Irrawaddy dolphins Endangered on
the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. All dolphins and finless porpoises
are also listed as Totally Protected in Sarawak's Wild Life Protection
Ordinance (1998).

Citation:
Lawrence, E.E.J., Peter, C., Minton, G., Grinang, J., Gumal, M., Zulkifli
Poh, A.N., Soon, V., Wilson, A., Bali, J., Ambie, S., Abdillah, D.N.,
Jackery, I., Choo, S., and Tuen, A.A. (2025). Stomach content analysis
reveals insights into the feeding ecology of coastal cetaceans in Sarawak,
Malaysia. Ocean & Coastal Management, 261: 107522.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2024.107522

Free access to the full article is available until 7 February 2025 on the
link here:
https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1kI273RKK--sJK

Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions.

On behalf of all the authors,

Kind regards,
Cindy Peter


-- 
Cindy Peter, MSc (Marine Ecology)
Research Fellow and Lecturer
Sarawak Dolphin Project
Institute of Biodiversity and Environmental Conservation
University Malaysia Sarawak
https://www.facebook.com/SarawakDolphinProject
<http://www.ibec.unimas.my/SDP2008>

Office: +60 82 583 069
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