Back to Search Start Over

Animal Counting Toolkit: a practical guide to small-boat surveys for estimating abundance of coastal marine mammals

Authors :
Eric A. Rexstad
Katie Gaut
Rowenna Gryba
Jeffrey E. Moore
Justin Steventon
Erin Ashe
Doug Sandilands
Randall R. Reeves
Rob Williams
University of St Andrews. Sea Mammal Research Unit
University of St Andrews. School of Mathematics and Statistics
University of St Andrews. Scottish Oceans Institute
University of St Andrews. Centre for Research into Ecological & Environmental Modelling
Source :
Endangered Species Research, Vol 34, Pp 149-165 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Inter-Research Science Center, 2017.

Abstract

The authors thank Synchronicity Earth, Marisla Foundation, and the US Marine Mammal Commission for seed funding for this program. Small cetaceans (dolphins and porpoises) face serious anthropogenic threats in coastal habitats. These include bycatch in fisheries; exposure to noise, plastic and chemical pollution; disturbance from boaters; and climate change. Generating reliable abundance estimates is essential to assess sustainability of bycatch in fishing gear or any other form of anthropogenic removals and to design conservation and recovery plans for endangered species. Cetacean abundance estimates are lacking from many coastal waters of many developing countries. Lack of funding and training opportunities makes it difficult to fill in data gaps. Even if international funding were found for surveys in developing countries, building local capacity would be necessary to sustain efforts over time to detect trends and monitor biodiversity loss. Large-scale, shipboard surveys can cost tens of thousands of US dollars each day. We focus on methods to generate preliminary abundance estimates from low-cost, small-boat surveys that embrace a ‘training-while-doing’ approach to fill in data gaps while simultaneously building regional capacity for data collection. Our toolkit offers practical guidance on simple design and field data collection protocols that work with small boats and small budgets, but expect analysis to involve collaboration with a quantitative ecologist or statistician. Our audience includes independent scientists, government conservation agencies, NGOs and indigenous coastal communities, with a primary focus on fisheries bycatch. We apply our Animal Counting Toolkit to a small-boat survey in Canada’s Pacific coastal waters to illustrate the key steps in collecting line transect survey data used to estimate and monitor marine mammal abundance. Publisher PDF

Details

ISSN :
16134796 and 18635407
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Endangered Species Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c4c2cc4d53079a5a52d820d3ff434583
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3354/esr00845