Dear Colleagues,
My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the publication of our recent 
research:


Lin W, Karczmarski L, Li J, Chan SCY, Guo L, Wu Y (2019) Differential 
population dynamics of a coastal porpoise correspond to the fishing effort in a 
large estuarine system. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 
0 doi 10.1002/aqc.2998.

Abstract
 The finless porpoise (genus Neophocaena) is susceptible to fishery‐caused 
mortality, and its numbers are thought to be in decline across its entire 
range. However, population demographics have rarely been quantified for this 
genus, with a few exceptions of the narrow‐ridged form (Neophocaena 
asiaeorientalis) in waters off Japan, Korea, and in the Yangtze River of China, 
all of which show a drastic decline in recent decades. Similar analyses have 
not been performed for the Indo‐Pacific (known also as the wide‐ridged) finless 
porpoise (Neophocaena phocaenoides) that inhabits (sub‐)tropical waters; thus, 
reliable risk assessments are lacking.
 The demographic dynamics of the Indo‐Pacific finless porpoise in the Pearl 
River Delta (PRD) region were investigated by analysing 307 cases of beached 
carcasses that were recovered between 1996 and 2014. The mean instantaneous 
rate of increase r indicated a declining trend of 3.6% loss per annum during 
1996–2005, and a subsequent recovering trend with 0.76% increase per annum 
during 2006–2014. The individual‐based Leslie matrix model constructed with the 
most up‐to‐date demographic parameters suggests that the conservation status of 
the finless porpoise in the PRD region corresponds to Near Threatened (NT) 
according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature criterion 
A3.
 This temporal demographic change may be due to changes in fishing effort, 
which has been declining locally since the late 1990s. Although more 
quantitative evidence is needed, it is shown that regulated management of 
coastal fisheries can serve as an effective tool in securing the long‐term 
persistence of Indo‐Pacific finless porpoise in the PRD region, which likely 
applies also elsewhere in the genus/species' range where coastal fisheries 
overlap with the porpoise habitat. Results provide baseline ecological 
indicators that can facilitate further monitoring of the population status and 
trend.

The paper is available at the following link:                                 
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/aqc.2998

Or alternatively, a pdf can be requested at: menji...@163.com 


Best regards,

Wenzhi Lin



menji...@163.com
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