2007
DOI: 10.1017/s0025315407054938
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Geographical and seasonal variation of harbour porpoise (Phocoena phocoena) presence in the German Baltic Sea revealed by passive acoustic monitoring

Abstract: The harbour porpoise is the only resident cetacean species in the German Baltic Sea. Within the last several decades this harbour porpoise stock declined drastically, causing deep concern about its status. Plans of the German government for proposing Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) to implement Natura 2000 and for assessing the impact of offshore windmill constructions on the marine environment led to an increased research effort on the harbour porpoise in German waters. For the first time, long-term passive aco… Show more

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Cited by 95 publications
(87 citation statements)
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“…Our results provide an estimate of the noise levels at which porpoise activity patterns are disrupted, and an indication of the scale of potential reductions in foraging activity [6]. Porpoise occurrence and activity is typically characterized by large seasonal and diel variability [19,31,32], as also reflected in our results (figure 2). Further studies are now required to explore the environmental conditions that drive this variation, and develop energetic models to assess whether this scale of disturbance has long-term consequences for individual energy budgets [33].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…Our results provide an estimate of the noise levels at which porpoise activity patterns are disrupted, and an indication of the scale of potential reductions in foraging activity [6]. Porpoise occurrence and activity is typically characterized by large seasonal and diel variability [19,31,32], as also reflected in our results (figure 2). Further studies are now required to explore the environmental conditions that drive this variation, and develop energetic models to assess whether this scale of disturbance has long-term consequences for individual energy budgets [33].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…The T-POD is a SAM tool which has been used extensively to monitor odontocetes (Leeney & Tregenza, 2006;Leeney et al, 2007;Philpott et al, 2007;Verfuß et al, 2007;Kyhn et al, 2008;Todd et al, 2009), including Hector's dolphins of New Zealand (Rayment et al, 2009a(Rayment et al, , 2009b, a species closely related to Heaviside's dolphins. The T-POD is a self-contained, submersible hydrophone and digital processor which recognizes and logs the echolocation clicks made by odontocetes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The inherent directionality of sonar emissions (e.g. Au 1993) and the likelihood that dolphins are often silent (Dawson 1994, Bloom et al 1995, Nowacek 2005, but see Verfuß et al 2007, Akamatsu et al 2007) further limit the chance of detection. Also, our use of the CET ALL category (in the T-POD software) was conservative, as genuine echolocation events are often classified as DOUBTFUL or VERY DOUBTFUL (Thomsen et al 2005, Rayment et al 2009a).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For many species, this changes seasonally (e.g. Wilson et al 1997, Verfuß et al 2007). Patchiness, over a variety of scales and time periods, is a general feature of marine mammal distributions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%