Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent publication “Harnessing 
citizen science for marine conservation in Malta: a comparative analysis of GAM 
and MaxEnt models in bottlenose dolphin habitat mapping” recently published in 
PeerJ Life & Environment.

Abstract:
Background. Species distribution models (SDMs) are powerful tools for informing 
conservation, particularly for highly mobile marine species such as common 
bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops truncatus). In Maltese waters, the limited 
availability of data on this species has constrained the effectiveness of 
conservation efforts. Despite the designation of offshore Special Areas of 
Conservation (SACs), key coastal regions need more detailed spatial studies to 
support evidence-based management.

Methods. In this study, we analyzed and compared the outputs of a generalized 
additive model (GAM) and a maximum entropy (MaxEnt) model to assess summer 
habitat suitability for bottlenose dolphins within a coastal SAC in Malta. The 
models were informed by presence-only data collected through systematic surveys 
and a citizen science campaign, integrated with environmental and anthropogenic 
predictors including chlorophyll-a concentration, sea surface temperature 
anomaly, slope, and distance to aquaculture sites.

Results. Both modeling approaches identified high habitat suitability in 
shallow, nearshore regions, with chlorophyll-a concentration and proximity to 
aquaculture sites emerging as the most important predictors. Slope and sea 
surface temperature anomaly contributed less substantially. The two models 
showed spatial agreement in highlighting these nearshore areas as core 
habitats, though GAM predicted a broader extent of suitable habitat, whereas 
MaxEnt results were more spatially restricted. Both models demonstrated strong 
predictive performance (AUC > 0.85), reinforcing the ecological relevance of 
the identified drivers.

Conclusion. This study demonstrates the potential of integrating opportunistic 
data with SDMs to support habitat assessments in data-limited contexts. The use 
of complementary modeling approaches provides robust insights into 
species–environment relationships. These results aim to guide spatial planning 
and future assessments of conservation priorities in Maltese coastal waters.

Please find the open access publication at: https://peerj.com/articles/19804/

Full reference:
Soster F, Awbery T, Vérité–Taulet N, Zammit T, Terribile K. 2025. Harnessing 
citizen science for marine conservation in Malta: a comparative analysis of GAM 
and MaxEnt models in bottlenose dolphin habitat mapping. PeerJ 13:e19804 
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.19804

Do not hesitate to reach out if you have any questions.

Best regards,

Francesca Soster

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