Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share the following publication in 
Endangered Species Research on space use of belugas, Delphinaterus leucas, from 
the St. Lawrence Estuary :

Barreau, E., Lesage, V., Michaud, R., Senecal, J. F., Chion, C., & Dupuch, A. 
(2025). Thirty years of herd focal follows reveal the functions of important 
habitats identified for the endangered St. Lawrence Estuary beluga. Endangered 
Species Research, 58, 435-449.

The full article is available in open acess at: 
https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v58/esr01461

ABSTRACT
Identifying habitat functions is crucial for understanding how endangered 
populations such as the St. Lawrence Estuary (SLE) beluga Delphinapterus leucas 
use their environment, and for guiding effective conservation measures. Often, 
the only way to infer the behavior of cetacean herds is by observing their 
surface activity and configuration. A previous study developed a classification 
connecting SLE beluga herd surface characteristics to their underwater diving 
behavior, enabling the inference of behavior from surface cues alone. Using 
this method, we analyzed surface activity descriptors collected every 30 min 
during multi-hour focal follows of 1496 beluga herds tracked in 1991-2020 to 
classify their behavior into 6 categories: (1) benthic feeding/resting/caring 
for young, (2) pelagic feeding, (3) pelagic exploration, (4) 
socialization/benthic feeding, (5) transit, and (6) mixed activities. The 
relative frequency of these behaviors within each of 27 previously identified 
key beluga areas formed the basis for statistically grouping areas by their 
dominant function. Two groups characterized by high directional movement 
closely matched (≥90%) previously hypothesized transit corridors. The other 2 
groups predominantly exhibited foraging and social behaviors, and matched 
mainly (≥70%) areas with high beluga residency whose specific function was 
previously unclear. Although habitat groups varied in environmental 
characteristics, no clear separation was observed, suggesting other factors may 
shape habitat use at multiple scales. This study highlighted that beluga have 
limited alternative habitats to support vital functions should local stressors 
compromise habitat quality or accessibility. These findings are critical 
because segments of the population show strong fidelity to specific summer 
sites.

Best regards,

Emmanuelle Barreau
------------------------------
PhD Candidate
Beluga - Noise impact project, LISSE research lab.
https://www.lisse-lab.com
University of Quebec in Outaouais (Gatineau, QC)


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