Unclassified - Non-Classifié

Dear colleagues,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our most recent publication, now 
available in Marine Mammal Science.

McMillan, C. J., E. A. Keppel, L. D. Spaven, S. M. Hrushowy, and T. 
Doniol-Valcroze. 2025. Seasonal Abundance and Distribution of Cetaceans in a 
High Traffic Shipping Corridor. Marine Mammal Science e70061. 
https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.70061.

Abstract:
The recovery of many cetacean species coincides spatially and temporally with 
intensifying anthropogenic threats. We undertook multi-year systematic surveys 
to quantify seasonal abundance and document the distribution of at-risk 
cetaceans, which is needed to assess the impacts of increasing human activities 
in the Canadian portions of the southern Salish Sea and Swiftsure Bank. We 
completed 21 line-transect surveys encompassing 5346?km of visual effort from 
September 2020 to December 2022 and collected 1514 sightings of five cetacean 
species using distance sampling protocols. Humpback whales, harbor porpoises, 
and Dall's porpoises were the most sighted species and were present in the area 
year-round, with strong seasonal differences in their abundance and 
distribution. Estimated abundance of humpback whales was lowest in winter at 17 
(95% CI: 11-26) and highest in fall at 416 (261-663). Harbor porpoise abundance 
was also lowest during winter at 606 (366-1006) and highest in fall at 1415 
(975-2055). Dall's porpoise abundance was lowest in summer at 65 (38-112) and 
highest in winter at 333 (224-494). These estimates were not corrected for 
availability or perception bias; thus, they may underestimate true abundance to 
some extent. These seasonal patterns in abundance and distribution will inform 
threat assessment and mitigation for cetaceans in this area of high and 
increasing vessel traffic.

The paper is available at the following link:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/mms.70061

Best,

    Christie

__________________________________________________________________
Christie McMillan (she/her)

Cetacean Research Program, Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Pacific Biological Station
3190 Hammond Bay Rd, Nanaimo, BC, V9T 6N7
Phone 236-330-1435
Email [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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