Regional-scale patterns in harbour porpoise occupancy of tidal stream environments

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Regional-scale patterns in harbour porpoise occupancy of tidal stream environments. / Waggitt, James; Dunn, H; Evans, Peter G. H. et al.
In: ICES Journal of Marine Science, 01.03.2018, p. 701-710.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Waggitt, J, Dunn, H, Evans, PGH, Hiddink, J, Holmes, LJ, Keen, E, Murcott, BD, Piano, M, Robins, P, Scott, BE, Bond, J & Veneruso, G 2018, 'Regional-scale patterns in harbour porpoise occupancy of tidal stream environments', ICES Journal of Marine Science, pp. 701-710. https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsx164

APA

Waggitt, J., Dunn, H., Evans, P. G. H., Hiddink, J., Holmes, L. J., Keen, E., Murcott, B. D., Piano, M., Robins, P., Scott, B. E., Bond, J., & Veneruso, G. (2018). Regional-scale patterns in harbour porpoise occupancy of tidal stream environments. ICES Journal of Marine Science, 701-710. https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsx164

CBE

Waggitt J, Dunn H, Evans PGH, Hiddink J, Holmes LJ, Keen E, Murcott BD, Piano M, Robins P, Scott BE, et al. 2018. Regional-scale patterns in harbour porpoise occupancy of tidal stream environments. ICES Journal of Marine Science. 701-710. https://doi.org/10.1093/icesjms/fsx164

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Waggitt J, Dunn H, Evans PGH, Hiddink J, Holmes LJ, Keen E et al. Regional-scale patterns in harbour porpoise occupancy of tidal stream environments. ICES Journal of Marine Science. 2018 Mar 1;701-710. Epub 2017 Aug 31. doi: 10.1093/icesjms/fsx164

Author

Waggitt, James ; Dunn, H ; Evans, Peter G. H. et al. / Regional-scale patterns in harbour porpoise occupancy of tidal stream environments. In: ICES Journal of Marine Science. 2018 ; pp. 701-710.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Regional-scale patterns in harbour porpoise occupancy of tidal stream environments

AU - Waggitt, James

AU - Dunn, H

AU - Evans, Peter G. H.

AU - Hiddink, Jan

AU - Holmes, L J

AU - Keen, E

AU - Murcott, B D

AU - Piano, Marco

AU - Robins, Peter

AU - Scott, B E

AU - Bond, Jenny

AU - Veneruso, Gemma

PY - 2018/3/1

Y1 - 2018/3/1

N2 - As harbour porpoises Phocoena phocoena are abundant within tidal stream environments, mitigating population-level impacts from tidal stream energy extraction is considered a conservation priority. An understanding of their spatial and temporal occupancy of these habitats at a regional-scale will help steer installations towards locations which maximize energy returns but reduce the potential for interactions with populations. This study quantifies and compares relationships between the presence of harbour porpoise and several hydrodynamic characteristics across four tidal stream environments in Anglesey, UK—a region that has been earmarked for extensive industrial development. Within sites (0.57–1.13 km2), encounters with animals were concentrated in small areas (<200 m2) and increased during certain tidal states (ebb vs. flood). In sites showing relatively high maximum current speeds (2.67–2.87 ms−1), encounters were strongly associated with the emergence of shear-lines. In sites with relatively low maximum current speeds (1.70–2.08 ms−1), encounters were more associated with areas of shallow water during peak current speeds. The overall probability of encounters was higher in low current sites. It is suggested that the likelihood of interactions could be reduced by restricting developments to sites with high maximum current speeds (>2.5 ms−1), and placing turbines in areas of laminar currents therein. This study shows that a combination of local and regional hydrodynamic characteristics can partially explain variations in occupancy patterns across tidal-stream environments. However, it was found that such hydrodynamic characteristics could not comprehensively explain these occupancy patterns. Further studies into the biophysical mechanisms creating foraging opportunities within these habitats are needed to identify alternative explanatory variables that may have universal applications.

AB - As harbour porpoises Phocoena phocoena are abundant within tidal stream environments, mitigating population-level impacts from tidal stream energy extraction is considered a conservation priority. An understanding of their spatial and temporal occupancy of these habitats at a regional-scale will help steer installations towards locations which maximize energy returns but reduce the potential for interactions with populations. This study quantifies and compares relationships between the presence of harbour porpoise and several hydrodynamic characteristics across four tidal stream environments in Anglesey, UK—a region that has been earmarked for extensive industrial development. Within sites (0.57–1.13 km2), encounters with animals were concentrated in small areas (<200 m2) and increased during certain tidal states (ebb vs. flood). In sites showing relatively high maximum current speeds (2.67–2.87 ms−1), encounters were strongly associated with the emergence of shear-lines. In sites with relatively low maximum current speeds (1.70–2.08 ms−1), encounters were more associated with areas of shallow water during peak current speeds. The overall probability of encounters was higher in low current sites. It is suggested that the likelihood of interactions could be reduced by restricting developments to sites with high maximum current speeds (>2.5 ms−1), and placing turbines in areas of laminar currents therein. This study shows that a combination of local and regional hydrodynamic characteristics can partially explain variations in occupancy patterns across tidal-stream environments. However, it was found that such hydrodynamic characteristics could not comprehensively explain these occupancy patterns. Further studies into the biophysical mechanisms creating foraging opportunities within these habitats are needed to identify alternative explanatory variables that may have universal applications.

KW - Cetacean

KW - Environmental impact assessment

KW - Foraging ecology

KW - Hydrodynamic model

KW - Marine renewable energy installations

KW - Marine spatial planning

KW - shore-based surveys

U2 - 10.1093/icesjms/fsx164

DO - 10.1093/icesjms/fsx164

M3 - Article

SP - 701

EP - 710

JO - ICES Journal of Marine Science

JF - ICES Journal of Marine Science

SN - 1054-3139

ER -