Wadden Sea Quality Status Report: Marine Mammals

The aim of the quality status report is to inform about the actual status of the harbour seal, grey seal and harbour porpoise within the Wadden Sea Area of Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands. As top predators, they are sentinels for ecosystem health. A variety of marine mammal experts of all three...

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Main Authors: Unger, B., Baltzer, J., Brackmann, J., Brasseur, S.M.J.M., Brugmann, M., Diederichs, B., Galatius, A., Geelhoed, S.C.V., Huus Petersen, H., IJsseldijk, L.L., Jensen, T.K., Jess, A., Nachtsheim, D., Philipp, C., Scheidat, M., Schop, J., Siebert, Ursula, Teilmann, Jonas, Thostesen, C.B., van Neer, A.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Common Wadden Sea Secretariat 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/wadden-sea-quality-status-report-marine-mammals-2
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spelling ftunivwagenin:oai:library.wur.nl:wurpubs/604850 2024-02-11T10:04:33+01:00 Wadden Sea Quality Status Report: Marine Mammals Unger, B. Baltzer, J. Brackmann, J. Brasseur, S.M.J.M. Brugmann, M. Diederichs, B. Galatius, A. Geelhoed, S.C.V. Huus Petersen, H. IJsseldijk, L.L. Jensen, T.K. Jess, A. Nachtsheim, D. Philipp, C. Scheidat, M. Schop, J. Siebert, Ursula Teilmann, Jonas Thostesen, C.B. van Neer, A. 2022 text/html https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/wadden-sea-quality-status-report-marine-mammals-2 en eng Common Wadden Sea Secretariat https://edepot.wur.nl/581405 https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/wadden-sea-quality-status-report-marine-mammals-2 (c) publisher Wageningen University & Research Life Science External research report 2022 ftunivwagenin 2024-01-24T23:13:45Z The aim of the quality status report is to inform about the actual status of the harbour seal, grey seal and harbour porpoise within the Wadden Sea Area of Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands. As top predators, they are sentinels for ecosystem health. A variety of marine mammal experts of all three countries have evaluated and assessed the research data collected during the current reporting period to provide an overview of the status of the three species within the Wadden Sea region. For seals, research methods include surveys following established monitoring methods to provide information on abundance and distribution. For porpoises, information was collated from aerial survey work, passive acoustic monitoring, tagging, and stranding networks. Population biology and health parameters were collected during necropsies of stranded marine mammals. Monitoring methods and coverage differed between regions and countries. Area-wide and continuous monitoring are essential for being able to observe changes and possible negative developments and allow for timely measures for the conservation of the three marine mammal species within the Wadden Sea Area. Marine mammals in the North Sea face a wide range of threats: underwater noise, fishing and pollution (contaminants and litter) which can affect their health and influence their distribution. Despite the current anthropogenic impacts, harbour seal counts during moult revealed the highest numbers since the first assessment in 2000. The same is true for the grey seal population: here, a constant rise since their return to the Wadden Sea in the mid-20th century was observed. For harbour porpoises, a southward shift was detected during large scale SCANS surveys between 1994 and 2016. German aerial surveys revealed a decreasing trend in porpoise density in the Natura2000 site “Sylt Outer Reef” west of Sylt as well as a decline in the entire German North Sea. Telemetry data on six harbour porpoises indicated residency in the Wadden Sea waters. Based on the current status of ... Report Harbour porpoise harbour seal Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library
institution Open Polar
collection Wageningen UR (University & Research Centre): Digital Library
op_collection_id ftunivwagenin
language English
topic Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Unger, B.
Baltzer, J.
Brackmann, J.
Brasseur, S.M.J.M.
Brugmann, M.
Diederichs, B.
Galatius, A.
Geelhoed, S.C.V.
Huus Petersen, H.
IJsseldijk, L.L.
Jensen, T.K.
Jess, A.
Nachtsheim, D.
Philipp, C.
Scheidat, M.
Schop, J.
Siebert, Ursula
Teilmann, Jonas
Thostesen, C.B.
van Neer, A.
Wadden Sea Quality Status Report: Marine Mammals
topic_facet Life Science
description The aim of the quality status report is to inform about the actual status of the harbour seal, grey seal and harbour porpoise within the Wadden Sea Area of Denmark, Germany and the Netherlands. As top predators, they are sentinels for ecosystem health. A variety of marine mammal experts of all three countries have evaluated and assessed the research data collected during the current reporting period to provide an overview of the status of the three species within the Wadden Sea region. For seals, research methods include surveys following established monitoring methods to provide information on abundance and distribution. For porpoises, information was collated from aerial survey work, passive acoustic monitoring, tagging, and stranding networks. Population biology and health parameters were collected during necropsies of stranded marine mammals. Monitoring methods and coverage differed between regions and countries. Area-wide and continuous monitoring are essential for being able to observe changes and possible negative developments and allow for timely measures for the conservation of the three marine mammal species within the Wadden Sea Area. Marine mammals in the North Sea face a wide range of threats: underwater noise, fishing and pollution (contaminants and litter) which can affect their health and influence their distribution. Despite the current anthropogenic impacts, harbour seal counts during moult revealed the highest numbers since the first assessment in 2000. The same is true for the grey seal population: here, a constant rise since their return to the Wadden Sea in the mid-20th century was observed. For harbour porpoises, a southward shift was detected during large scale SCANS surveys between 1994 and 2016. German aerial surveys revealed a decreasing trend in porpoise density in the Natura2000 site “Sylt Outer Reef” west of Sylt as well as a decline in the entire German North Sea. Telemetry data on six harbour porpoises indicated residency in the Wadden Sea waters. Based on the current status of ...
format Report
author Unger, B.
Baltzer, J.
Brackmann, J.
Brasseur, S.M.J.M.
Brugmann, M.
Diederichs, B.
Galatius, A.
Geelhoed, S.C.V.
Huus Petersen, H.
IJsseldijk, L.L.
Jensen, T.K.
Jess, A.
Nachtsheim, D.
Philipp, C.
Scheidat, M.
Schop, J.
Siebert, Ursula
Teilmann, Jonas
Thostesen, C.B.
van Neer, A.
author_facet Unger, B.
Baltzer, J.
Brackmann, J.
Brasseur, S.M.J.M.
Brugmann, M.
Diederichs, B.
Galatius, A.
Geelhoed, S.C.V.
Huus Petersen, H.
IJsseldijk, L.L.
Jensen, T.K.
Jess, A.
Nachtsheim, D.
Philipp, C.
Scheidat, M.
Schop, J.
Siebert, Ursula
Teilmann, Jonas
Thostesen, C.B.
van Neer, A.
author_sort Unger, B.
title Wadden Sea Quality Status Report: Marine Mammals
title_short Wadden Sea Quality Status Report: Marine Mammals
title_full Wadden Sea Quality Status Report: Marine Mammals
title_fullStr Wadden Sea Quality Status Report: Marine Mammals
title_full_unstemmed Wadden Sea Quality Status Report: Marine Mammals
title_sort wadden sea quality status report: marine mammals
publisher Common Wadden Sea Secretariat
publishDate 2022
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/wadden-sea-quality-status-report-marine-mammals-2
genre Harbour porpoise
harbour seal
genre_facet Harbour porpoise
harbour seal
op_relation https://edepot.wur.nl/581405
https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/wadden-sea-quality-status-report-marine-mammals-2
op_rights (c) publisher
Wageningen University & Research
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