Dear MARMAM community,


On behalf of me and my co-authors I am pleased to announce the open-access
publication of our paper: “Density and abundance estimates of cetaceans in
the Black Sea through aerial surveys (ASI/CeNoBS)”
DOI=10.3389/fmars.2024.1248950


This first synoptic, collaborative, and coordinated aerial survey for
cetaceans in the Black Sea yielded comprehensive data and the first robust
insights on abundance, distribution and density for all three cetacean
species.


Open access link to the paper:

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2024.1248950/full?utm_source=F-NTF&utm_medium=EMLX&utm_campaign=PRD_FEOPS_20170000_ARTICLE



By Paiu Romulus-Marian*, Cañadas Ana, Dede Ayhan, Meshkova Galina, Murariu
Dumitru, Amaha Ozturk Ayaka, Popov Dimitar, Tonay Arda M., Timofte Costin,
Kopaliani Natia, Gol’din Pavel* and* Panigada Simone



 Abstract: Population abundance is amongst the most basic and crucial
parameters for the assessment of conservation status of any species. Three
species of odontocetes, all represented by local subspecies, inhabit the
Black Sea: the Black Sea common dolphin *Delphinus delphis ponticus,* the
Black Sea bottlenose dolphin *Tursiops truncatus ponticus,* and the Black
Sea harbour porpoise *Phocoena phocoena relicta*. Their populations are
threatened by multiple factors, including overfishing of their prey,
bycatch, pollution and epizootics. Despite this, there are no basin-wide
estimates for any cetacean species in the Black Sea. In 2019, a systematic
study was carried out under the EU CeNoBS project. Six strata were designed
in the waters of Bulgaria, Georgia, Romania, Türkiye and Ukraine, covering
most of territorial and offshore waters, which were surveyed between June
19 and July 4. A line transect distance sampling approach was used,
following predefined transects within each stratum, achieving a 5% coverage
of the surveyed area. A total of 7,344 kilometers of transects were
surveyed recording a total of 1,744 cetacean sightings. Design-based
abundance estimates were obtained using a Multiple Covariate Distance
Sampling (MCDS) approach. Model-based abundance estimates were also derived
using a Generalized Additive Models (GAM) approach, linking species
sightings with a number of environmental covariates (e.g., bathymetric
features, sea surface temperature, chlorophyll-a) over a grid of 10x10 km.
The uncorrected (for perception and availability bias) estimates obtained
through the model-based analysis were 108,283 (CV=0.07) common dolphins,
22,720 (CV=0.15) bottlenose dolphins and 93,808 (CV=0.06) harbour
porpoises. These aerial surveys yielded the first insights on overall
abundance, density and distribution, providing current regional baseline
values and density maps for all three cetacean species of the Black Sea
during the summer months, to be used for the elaboration of effective
conservation measures and to address national and international
requirements.


Please reach out to romulus.mar...@gmail.com with any questions!

Cheers,


Marian PAIU

Mare Nostrum NGO

www.marenostrum.ro
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