Possible causes of a harbour porpoise mass stranding in Danish waters in 2005

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Possible causes of a harbour porpoise mass stranding in Danish waters in 2005. / Wright, Andrew J.; Maar, Marie; Mohn, Christian; Nabe-Nielsen, Jacob; Siebert, Ursula; Jensen, Lasse Fast; Baagøe, Hans J.; Teilmann, Jonas.

I: PLoS ONE, Bind 8, Nr. 2, e55553, 27.02.2013.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Wright, AJ, Maar, M, Mohn, C, Nabe-Nielsen, J, Siebert, U, Jensen, LF, Baagøe, HJ & Teilmann, J 2013, 'Possible causes of a harbour porpoise mass stranding in Danish waters in 2005', PLoS ONE, bind 8, nr. 2, e55553. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055553

APA

Wright, A. J., Maar, M., Mohn, C., Nabe-Nielsen, J., Siebert, U., Jensen, L. F., Baagøe, H. J., & Teilmann, J. (2013). Possible causes of a harbour porpoise mass stranding in Danish waters in 2005. PLoS ONE, 8(2), [e55553]. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055553

Vancouver

Wright AJ, Maar M, Mohn C, Nabe-Nielsen J, Siebert U, Jensen LF o.a. Possible causes of a harbour porpoise mass stranding in Danish waters in 2005. PLoS ONE. 2013 feb. 27;8(2). e55553. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0055553

Author

Wright, Andrew J. ; Maar, Marie ; Mohn, Christian ; Nabe-Nielsen, Jacob ; Siebert, Ursula ; Jensen, Lasse Fast ; Baagøe, Hans J. ; Teilmann, Jonas. / Possible causes of a harbour porpoise mass stranding in Danish waters in 2005. I: PLoS ONE. 2013 ; Bind 8, Nr. 2.

Bibtex

@article{673fdbadf7ee42b88c07b0b31377beb3,
title = "Possible causes of a harbour porpoise mass stranding in Danish waters in 2005",
abstract = "An unprecedented 85 harbour porpoises stranded freshly dead along approximately 100 km of Danish coastline from 7-15 April, 2005. This total is considerably above the mean weekly stranding rate for the whole of Denmark, both for any time of year, 1.23 animals/week (ranging from 0 to 20 during 2003-2008, excluding April 2005), and specifically in April, 0.65 animals/week (0 to 4, same period). Bycatch was established as the cause of death for most of the individuals through typical indications of fisheries interactions, including net markings in the skin and around the flippers, and loss of tail flukes. Local fishermen confirmed unusually large porpoise bycatch in nets set for lumpfish (Cyclopterus lumpus) and the strandings were attributed to an early lumpfish season. However, lumpfish catches for 2005 were not unusual in terms of season onset, peak or total catch, when compared to 2003-2008. Consequently, human activity was combined with environmental factors and the variation in Danish fisheries landings (determined through a principal component analysis) in a two-part statistical model to assess the correlation of these factors with both the presence of fresh strandings and the numbers of strandings on the Danish west coast. The final statistical model (which was forward selected using Akaike information criterion; AIC) indicated that naval presence is correlated with higher rates of porpoise strandings, particularly in combination with certain fisheries, although it is not correlated with the actual presence of strandings. Military vessels from various countries were confirmed in the area from the 7th April, en route to the largest naval exercise in Danish waters to date (Loyal Mariner 2005, 11-28 April). Although sonar usage cannot be confirmed, it is likely that ships were testing various equipment prior to the main exercise. Thus naval activity cannot be ruled out as a possible contributing factor.",
author = "Wright, {Andrew J.} and Marie Maar and Christian Mohn and Jacob Nabe-Nielsen and Ursula Siebert and Jensen, {Lasse Fast} and Baag{\o}e, {Hans J.} and Jonas Teilmann",
note = "OA",
year = "2013",
month = feb,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0055553",
language = "English",
volume = "8",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Possible causes of a harbour porpoise mass stranding in Danish waters in 2005

AU - Wright, Andrew J.

AU - Maar, Marie

AU - Mohn, Christian

AU - Nabe-Nielsen, Jacob

AU - Siebert, Ursula

AU - Jensen, Lasse Fast

AU - Baagøe, Hans J.

AU - Teilmann, Jonas

N1 - OA

PY - 2013/2/27

Y1 - 2013/2/27

N2 - An unprecedented 85 harbour porpoises stranded freshly dead along approximately 100 km of Danish coastline from 7-15 April, 2005. This total is considerably above the mean weekly stranding rate for the whole of Denmark, both for any time of year, 1.23 animals/week (ranging from 0 to 20 during 2003-2008, excluding April 2005), and specifically in April, 0.65 animals/week (0 to 4, same period). Bycatch was established as the cause of death for most of the individuals through typical indications of fisheries interactions, including net markings in the skin and around the flippers, and loss of tail flukes. Local fishermen confirmed unusually large porpoise bycatch in nets set for lumpfish (Cyclopterus lumpus) and the strandings were attributed to an early lumpfish season. However, lumpfish catches for 2005 were not unusual in terms of season onset, peak or total catch, when compared to 2003-2008. Consequently, human activity was combined with environmental factors and the variation in Danish fisheries landings (determined through a principal component analysis) in a two-part statistical model to assess the correlation of these factors with both the presence of fresh strandings and the numbers of strandings on the Danish west coast. The final statistical model (which was forward selected using Akaike information criterion; AIC) indicated that naval presence is correlated with higher rates of porpoise strandings, particularly in combination with certain fisheries, although it is not correlated with the actual presence of strandings. Military vessels from various countries were confirmed in the area from the 7th April, en route to the largest naval exercise in Danish waters to date (Loyal Mariner 2005, 11-28 April). Although sonar usage cannot be confirmed, it is likely that ships were testing various equipment prior to the main exercise. Thus naval activity cannot be ruled out as a possible contributing factor.

AB - An unprecedented 85 harbour porpoises stranded freshly dead along approximately 100 km of Danish coastline from 7-15 April, 2005. This total is considerably above the mean weekly stranding rate for the whole of Denmark, both for any time of year, 1.23 animals/week (ranging from 0 to 20 during 2003-2008, excluding April 2005), and specifically in April, 0.65 animals/week (0 to 4, same period). Bycatch was established as the cause of death for most of the individuals through typical indications of fisheries interactions, including net markings in the skin and around the flippers, and loss of tail flukes. Local fishermen confirmed unusually large porpoise bycatch in nets set for lumpfish (Cyclopterus lumpus) and the strandings were attributed to an early lumpfish season. However, lumpfish catches for 2005 were not unusual in terms of season onset, peak or total catch, when compared to 2003-2008. Consequently, human activity was combined with environmental factors and the variation in Danish fisheries landings (determined through a principal component analysis) in a two-part statistical model to assess the correlation of these factors with both the presence of fresh strandings and the numbers of strandings on the Danish west coast. The final statistical model (which was forward selected using Akaike information criterion; AIC) indicated that naval presence is correlated with higher rates of porpoise strandings, particularly in combination with certain fisheries, although it is not correlated with the actual presence of strandings. Military vessels from various countries were confirmed in the area from the 7th April, en route to the largest naval exercise in Danish waters to date (Loyal Mariner 2005, 11-28 April). Although sonar usage cannot be confirmed, it is likely that ships were testing various equipment prior to the main exercise. Thus naval activity cannot be ruled out as a possible contributing factor.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0055553

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0055553

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23460787

VL - 8

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 2

M1 - e55553

ER -

ID: 118769414