New research article available:

Verutes, G. M., Tubbs, S. E., Selmes, N., Clark, D. R., Walker, P., & Clements, 
O. (2021). Modelling seasonal distribution of Irrawaddy dolphins (Orcaella 
brevirostris) in a transnational Important Marine Mammal Area. Frontiers in 
Marine Science, 8, 698. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2021.617921

PDF available at 
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2021.617921/full

Abstract
Fishing activities continue to decimate populations of marine mammals, fish, 
and their habitats in the coastal waters of the Kep Archipelago, a cluster of 
tropical islands on the Cambodia-Vietnam border. In 2019, the area was 
recognized as an Important Marine Mammal Area, largely owing to the significant 
presence of Irrawaddy dolphins (Orcaella brevirostris). Understanding habitat 
preferences and distribution aids in the identification of areas to target for 
monitoring and conservation, which is particularly challenging in data-limited 
nations of Southeast Asia. Here, we test the hypothesis that accurate seasonal 
habitat models, relying on environmental data and species occurrences alone, 
can be used to describe the ecological processes governing abundance for the 
resident dolphin population of the Kep Archipelago, Cambodia. Leveraging two 
years of species and oceanographic data-depth, slope, distance to shore and 
rivers, sea surface temperature, and chlorophyll-a concentration-we built 
temporally stratified models to estimate distribution and infer seasonal 
habitat importance. Overall, Irrawaddy dolphins of Kep displayed habitat 
preferences similar to other populations, and were predominately encountered in 
three situations: (1) water depths ranging from 3.0 to 5.3 m, (2) surface water 
temperatures of 27-32C, and (3) in close proximity to offshore islands (< 7.5 
km). With respect to seasonality, statistical tests detected significant 
differences for all environment variables considered except seafloor slope. 
Four predictor sets, each with a unique combination of variables, were used to 
map seasonal variation in dolphin habitat suitability. Models with highest 
variable importance scores were water depth, pre-and during monsoon season 
(61-62%), and sea surface temperature, post-monsoon (71%), which suggests that 
greater freshwater flow during the wet season may alter primary productivity 
and dolphin prey abundance. Importantly, findings show the majority of areas 
with highest habitat suitability are not currently surveyed for dolphins and 
located outside Kep's Marine Fisheries Management Area. This research confirms 
the need to expand monitoring to new areas where high-impact fisheries and 
other human activities operate. Baseline knowledge on dolphin distribution can 
guide regional conservation efforts by taking into account the seasonality of 
the species and support the design of tailored management strategies that 
address transboundary threats to an Important Marine Mammal Area.

This work builds on the Irrawaddy dolphin habitat models for the Kien Giang 
Biosphere Reserve/Kep Archipelago border region previously mapped by:

  *   Verutes, Gregory M., et al. "Using GIS and stakeholder involvement to 
innovate marine mammal bycatch risk assessment in data-limited fisheries." PloS 
one 15.8 (2020): e0237835.
  *   Hines, Ellen, et al. "Getting to the bottom of bycatch: a GIS-based 
toolbox to assess the risk of marine mammal bycatch." Endangered Species 
Research 42 (2020): 37-57.

Regards,
Gregg
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