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spelling ftunstandrewcris:oai:risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/a7030526-1602-445c-aceb-7197bed2153e 2023-05-15T16:33:39+02:00 Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles:Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78 Carter, Matt I. D. Boehme, Lars Duck, Callan David Grecian, James Hastie, Gordon Drummond McConnell, Bernie J Miller, David Lawrence Morris, Chris Moss, Simon Thompson, Dave Thompson, Paul Russell, Debbie JF 2020-11-27 application/pdf https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/habitatbased-predictions-of-atsea-distribution-for-grey-and-harbour-seals-in-the-british-isles(a7030526-1602-445c-aceb-7197bed2153e).html https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/bitstream/10023/21558/1/Carter2020_Report_BEIS.pdf https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/959723/SMRU_2020_Habitat-based_predictions_of_at-sea_distribution_for_grey_and_harbour_seals_in_the_British_Isles.pdf eng eng Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of St Andrews info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Carter , M I D , Boehme , L , Duck , C D , Grecian , J , Hastie , G D , McConnell , B J , Miller , D L , Morris , C , Moss , S , Thompson , D , Thompson , P & Russell , D JF 2020 , Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles : Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78 . Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of St Andrews . Grey seal Harbour seal Habitat preference Distribution maps Density maps book 2020 ftunstandrewcris 2022-06-02T07:52:35Z The United Kingdom has large populations of both grey (Halichoerus grypus) and harbour seals (Phoca vitulina), which are protected under national and international legislation. In recent years, aerial surveys have revealed region-specific changes in population dynamics for both species, ranging from exponential increases (e.g. grey seals in the Southern North Sea) to catastrophic localised declines (e.g. harbour seals in East Scotland and Orkney). Up-to-date information on the at-sea distributions of these species is required to inform environmentally sensitive management strategies and marine spatial planning. Such distributions have been estimated using data from animal-borne telemetry tags which record and transmit tracking data, providing information on at-sea movements and haul-out behaviour. Such tags are glued to the seal’s fur and fall off during the annual moult. The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, through their Offshore Energy Strategic Environmental Assessment (OESEA) programme, provided funding for a large-scale deployment of high resolution GPS telemetry tags on grey seals around the UK, and the subsequent analyses to generate up-to-date estimates of at-sea distribution for both seal species. To produce these estimates, a habitat modelling approach was adopted; seal tracking data were matched to a sample of the available habitat to quantify the region-specific species-environment relationships underpinning seal distribution. Spatially resolved abundance data (i.e. haulout counts) were then used to generate predictions for both species emanating from all known haulouts in the British Isles. The resulting predicted distribution maps provide estimates per species, on a 5 km x 5 km grid, of relative at-sea density for seals hauling-out in the British Isles. Three values are given for each grid cell: the mean density prediction from the habitat preference models and associated lower and upper 95% confidence intervals. For each cell, the confidence intervals provide a range of ... Book harbour seal Phoca vitulina University of St Andrews: Research Portal
institution Open Polar
collection University of St Andrews: Research Portal
op_collection_id ftunstandrewcris
language English
topic Grey seal
Harbour seal
Habitat preference
Distribution maps
Density maps
spellingShingle Grey seal
Harbour seal
Habitat preference
Distribution maps
Density maps
Carter, Matt I. D.
Boehme, Lars
Duck, Callan David
Grecian, James
Hastie, Gordon Drummond
McConnell, Bernie J
Miller, David Lawrence
Morris, Chris
Moss, Simon
Thompson, Dave
Thompson, Paul
Russell, Debbie JF
Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles:Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78
topic_facet Grey seal
Harbour seal
Habitat preference
Distribution maps
Density maps
description The United Kingdom has large populations of both grey (Halichoerus grypus) and harbour seals (Phoca vitulina), which are protected under national and international legislation. In recent years, aerial surveys have revealed region-specific changes in population dynamics for both species, ranging from exponential increases (e.g. grey seals in the Southern North Sea) to catastrophic localised declines (e.g. harbour seals in East Scotland and Orkney). Up-to-date information on the at-sea distributions of these species is required to inform environmentally sensitive management strategies and marine spatial planning. Such distributions have been estimated using data from animal-borne telemetry tags which record and transmit tracking data, providing information on at-sea movements and haul-out behaviour. Such tags are glued to the seal’s fur and fall off during the annual moult. The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, through their Offshore Energy Strategic Environmental Assessment (OESEA) programme, provided funding for a large-scale deployment of high resolution GPS telemetry tags on grey seals around the UK, and the subsequent analyses to generate up-to-date estimates of at-sea distribution for both seal species. To produce these estimates, a habitat modelling approach was adopted; seal tracking data were matched to a sample of the available habitat to quantify the region-specific species-environment relationships underpinning seal distribution. Spatially resolved abundance data (i.e. haulout counts) were then used to generate predictions for both species emanating from all known haulouts in the British Isles. The resulting predicted distribution maps provide estimates per species, on a 5 km x 5 km grid, of relative at-sea density for seals hauling-out in the British Isles. Three values are given for each grid cell: the mean density prediction from the habitat preference models and associated lower and upper 95% confidence intervals. For each cell, the confidence intervals provide a range of ...
format Book
author Carter, Matt I. D.
Boehme, Lars
Duck, Callan David
Grecian, James
Hastie, Gordon Drummond
McConnell, Bernie J
Miller, David Lawrence
Morris, Chris
Moss, Simon
Thompson, Dave
Thompson, Paul
Russell, Debbie JF
author_facet Carter, Matt I. D.
Boehme, Lars
Duck, Callan David
Grecian, James
Hastie, Gordon Drummond
McConnell, Bernie J
Miller, David Lawrence
Morris, Chris
Moss, Simon
Thompson, Dave
Thompson, Paul
Russell, Debbie JF
author_sort Carter, Matt I. D.
title Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles:Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78
title_short Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles:Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78
title_full Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles:Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78
title_fullStr Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles:Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78
title_full_unstemmed Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles:Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78
title_sort habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the british isles:report to beis, oesea-16-76, oesea-17-78
publisher Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of St Andrews
publishDate 2020
url https://risweb.st-andrews.ac.uk/portal/en/researchoutput/habitatbased-predictions-of-atsea-distribution-for-grey-and-harbour-seals-in-the-british-isles(a7030526-1602-445c-aceb-7197bed2153e).html
https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/bitstream/10023/21558/1/Carter2020_Report_BEIS.pdf
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/959723/SMRU_2020_Habitat-based_predictions_of_at-sea_distribution_for_grey_and_harbour_seals_in_the_British_Isles.pdf
genre harbour seal
Phoca vitulina
genre_facet harbour seal
Phoca vitulina
op_source Carter , M I D , Boehme , L , Duck , C D , Grecian , J , Hastie , G D , McConnell , B J , Miller , D L , Morris , C , Moss , S , Thompson , D , Thompson , P & Russell , D JF 2020 , Habitat-based predictions of at-sea distribution for grey and harbour seals in the British Isles : Report to BEIS, OESEA-16-76, OESEA-17-78 . Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of St Andrews .
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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