2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay

Project objectives: • Dugongs are of significant biodiversity value as the only extant species in the Family Dugongidae and one of only four species in the Order Sirenia, all of which are listed as vulnerable to extinction by the IUCN. • Australia has international responsibilities for dugong conser...

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Main Authors: Cleguer, Christophe, Hamel, Melanie, Rankin, Robert, Genson, Allyson, Edwards, Chloe, Collins, Kym, Crowe, Michael, Choukroun, Severine, Marsh, Helene
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: TropWATER, James Cook University 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80576/1/Cleguer_etal_2023_GBR_Dugong_Report_14072023.pdf
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spelling ftjamescook:oai:researchonline.jcu.edu.au:80576 2023-10-29T02:36:22+01:00 2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay Cleguer, Christophe Hamel, Melanie Rankin, Robert Genson, Allyson Edwards, Chloe Collins, Kym Crowe, Michael Choukroun, Severine Marsh, Helene 2023 application/pdf https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80576/1/Cleguer_etal_2023_GBR_Dugong_Report_14072023.pdf unknown TropWATER, James Cook University https://doi.org/10.25903/S661-1J55 https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80576/ https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80576/1/Cleguer_etal_2023_GBR_Dugong_Report_14072023.pdf Cleguer, Christophe, Hamel, Melanie, Rankin, Robert, Genson, Allyson, Edwards, Chloe, Collins, Kym, Crowe, Michael, Choukroun, Severine, and Marsh, Helene (2023) 2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay. Report. TropWATER, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia. open Report NonPeerReviewed 2023 ftjamescook https://doi.org/10.25903/S661-1J55 2023-10-02T22:54:56Z Project objectives: • Dugongs are of significant biodiversity value as the only extant species in the Family Dugongidae and one of only four species in the Order Sirenia, all of which are listed as vulnerable to extinction by the IUCN. • Australia has international responsibilities for dugong conservation, particularly in the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) region, where the dugong feeding grounds are listed as one of the World Heritage values of the region. • Dugongs have been monitored along the Queensland coast since the 1980s using a series of standardised aerial surveys. These surveys have provided long-term information on the distribution and abundance of dugongs, which has informed management and are a requirement of the Reef 2050 Long-Term Sustainability Plan (Reef 2050 Plan). The surveys have been loosely coordinated across jurisdictions and largely conducted at the same time of year at approximately five-year intervals. The areas adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef have been included to account for temporary migrations of dugongs across jurisdictional boundaries. • This report presents the result of an aerial survey for dugongs and large juvenile and adult marine turtles that was conducted in November-December 2022 in the coastal waters of Queensland from Mission Beach to the Queensland-New South Wales border. The survey is the latest in the time series of surveys conducted by James Cook University-TropWATER researchers since the 1980s. • The objectives of our study were to: 1. continue the time series of surveys for dugongs and large marine turtles. 2. to use the latest programming, modelling, and statistical advances to enhance our dugong distribution and abundance analysis. 3. engage with First Nations people across the surveyed area to: (1) raise awareness about dugong and sea turtle ecology and conservation issues, (2) seek interest from the communities in becoming involved in dugong survey work at different spatial scales, particularly aerial imagery surveys. 4. discuss new avenues for reducing ... Report First Nations James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
institution Open Polar
collection James Cook University, Australia: ResearchOnline@JCU
op_collection_id ftjamescook
language unknown
description Project objectives: • Dugongs are of significant biodiversity value as the only extant species in the Family Dugongidae and one of only four species in the Order Sirenia, all of which are listed as vulnerable to extinction by the IUCN. • Australia has international responsibilities for dugong conservation, particularly in the Great Barrier Reef (GBR) region, where the dugong feeding grounds are listed as one of the World Heritage values of the region. • Dugongs have been monitored along the Queensland coast since the 1980s using a series of standardised aerial surveys. These surveys have provided long-term information on the distribution and abundance of dugongs, which has informed management and are a requirement of the Reef 2050 Long-Term Sustainability Plan (Reef 2050 Plan). The surveys have been loosely coordinated across jurisdictions and largely conducted at the same time of year at approximately five-year intervals. The areas adjacent to the Great Barrier Reef have been included to account for temporary migrations of dugongs across jurisdictional boundaries. • This report presents the result of an aerial survey for dugongs and large juvenile and adult marine turtles that was conducted in November-December 2022 in the coastal waters of Queensland from Mission Beach to the Queensland-New South Wales border. The survey is the latest in the time series of surveys conducted by James Cook University-TropWATER researchers since the 1980s. • The objectives of our study were to: 1. continue the time series of surveys for dugongs and large marine turtles. 2. to use the latest programming, modelling, and statistical advances to enhance our dugong distribution and abundance analysis. 3. engage with First Nations people across the surveyed area to: (1) raise awareness about dugong and sea turtle ecology and conservation issues, (2) seek interest from the communities in becoming involved in dugong survey work at different spatial scales, particularly aerial imagery surveys. 4. discuss new avenues for reducing ...
format Report
author Cleguer, Christophe
Hamel, Melanie
Rankin, Robert
Genson, Allyson
Edwards, Chloe
Collins, Kym
Crowe, Michael
Choukroun, Severine
Marsh, Helene
spellingShingle Cleguer, Christophe
Hamel, Melanie
Rankin, Robert
Genson, Allyson
Edwards, Chloe
Collins, Kym
Crowe, Michael
Choukroun, Severine
Marsh, Helene
2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay
author_facet Cleguer, Christophe
Hamel, Melanie
Rankin, Robert
Genson, Allyson
Edwards, Chloe
Collins, Kym
Crowe, Michael
Choukroun, Severine
Marsh, Helene
author_sort Cleguer, Christophe
title 2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay
title_short 2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay
title_full 2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay
title_fullStr 2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay
title_full_unstemmed 2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay
title_sort 2022 dugong aerial survey: mission beach to moreton bay
publisher TropWATER, James Cook University
publishDate 2023
url https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80576/1/Cleguer_etal_2023_GBR_Dugong_Report_14072023.pdf
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation https://doi.org/10.25903/S661-1J55
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80576/
https://researchonline.jcu.edu.au/80576/1/Cleguer_etal_2023_GBR_Dugong_Report_14072023.pdf
Cleguer, Christophe, Hamel, Melanie, Rankin, Robert, Genson, Allyson, Edwards, Chloe, Collins, Kym, Crowe, Michael, Choukroun, Severine, and Marsh, Helene (2023) 2022 Dugong Aerial Survey: Mission Beach to Moreton Bay. Report. TropWATER, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, Australia.
op_rights open
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25903/S661-1J55
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