Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent publication that was 
published in Frontiers in Conservation Science as part of a special Research 
Topic on rebounding marine mammal species and conservation recovery challenges. 
The paper is open access and available at: 
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcosc.2024.1408982

Leach, L., J.R. Stevens, and K. Cammen. 2024. Pinniped response to diadromous 
fish restoration in the Penobscot River Estuary. Frontiers in Conservation 
Science 5. https://doi.org/10.3389/fcosc.2024.1408982

Abstract:

Successful conservation of pinnipeds in the northwest Atlantic has led to 
increasing populations of harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) and gray seals 
(Halichoerus grypus) in the Gulf of Maine. Within this region, habitat 
restoration and diadromous fish conservation in the Penobscot River have also 
been top priorities for the past decade. To understand the overlap between the 
regional recovery of pinnipeds and the aggregative response of pinnipeds to 
increasing forage fish, we assessed how counts, distribution, and behavior of 
seals in the Penobscot River Estuary have changed over time from 2012 to 2020 
and determined whether those changes were related to changes in fish biomass 
that are occurring as the result of diadromous fish restoration. We did not see 
increased counts of hauled-out seals, but consistent with regional harbor seal 
phenology, hauled out seal counts were highest in late spring and declined 
throughout the summer and into the fall. The number of swimming harbor and gray 
seals, analyzed as a proxy for changes in behavior, showed a stronger annual 
trend with an increase throughout the study period. Fish biomass was negatively 
associated with total number of hauled out seals and swimming gray seals but 
positively associated with swimming harbor seals. We also documented the 
potential displacement of harbor seals when gray seals are present. Together, 
these results begin to provide insights into how regional conservation and 
local restoration efforts interact to affect multiple trophic levels in an 
ecosystem. Continued monitoring of predator-prey interactions, along with diet 
and movement studies, will further elucidate seal aggregative response to 
increasing prey species in this system and the potential impact of recovering 
predator populations on restored prey populations. Knowledge gained regarding 
pinniped response to increasing fish biomass has important implications for 
other systems with ongoing conservation measures that aim to improve habitat, 
decrease exploitation, or recover protected species. Studies like these can be 
critical for finding paths forward to reconcile the potentially competing 
objectives of marine mammal protection and fish restoration.
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