Dear Colleagues,

On behalf of my coauthors, I am pleased to announce the publication of a
new open access paper:

Ryan, C., Calderan, S., Allison, C., Leaper, R., & Risch, D. (2022).
Historical occurrence of whales in Scottish Waters inferred from whaling
records. *Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems*.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/aqc.3873

Abstract
Archived logbooks detailing landings at Scottish shore-based whaling
stations between 1903 and 1951 were used to map whale catch locations.
Historical distribution and occurrence are inferred and summary statistics
on total landings are updated for blue (Balaenoptera musculus), fin
(Balaenoptera physalus), humpback (Megaptera novaeangliae), North Atlantic
right (Eubalaena glacialis), sei (Balaenoptera borealis) and sperm
(Physeter macrocephalus) whales: a total of 9,996 whales were caught during
this period, which is 3.7% higher than previously reported and 25% higher
for blue whales.
The most frequently caught species were fin and sei whales. Whaling off
Scotland in the 1920s contributed to the likely extinction of right whales
in the eastern North Atlantic. Blue whales, once regularly hunted to the
west of Scotland, are now rarely documented there and North-east Atlantic
whaling appears to have had a significant and lasting impact on sei whales.
Analysis of whaling effort indicates that catch rates remained high despite
the depletion of some species. This may be a consequence of two features of
Scottish shore-based whaling: (1) the mixed species catch composition; and
(2) the catching of whales as they migrated through Scottish waters.
The findings of this study highlight the historical significance of the
shelf-seas around Scotland as a habitat for some species, which was not
apparent from previous studies. These results can inform where there may be
potential for the recovery of some species in the future.
Current major threats in the North Atlantic include entanglement, ship
strike and displacement owing to the effects of climate change. The
baseline and historical information on distribution and seasonal occurrence
examined here is important for informing spatial and temporal measures to
reduce these threats. If populations are to recover post-whaling there is
an increasing need to reduce threats such as ship strikes and entanglement,
whose magnitude is proportional to whale density.

We have a lot of work to do.
Best wishes
Conor Ryan

website: conorryan.photography
twitter: @whale_nerd <https://twitter.com/whale_nerd>
instagram: @whale_nerd <https://www.instagram.com/whale_nerd/>
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