Assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the Northwest Atlantic.

Baleen whales are among the largest marine megafauna, and while mostly well-protected from direct exploitation, they are increasingly affected by vessel traffic, interactions with fisheries, and climate change. Adverse interactions, notably vessel strikes and fishing gear entanglement, often result...

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Main Authors: Hannah Solway, Boris Worm, Tonya Wimmer, Derek P Tittensor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315909
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author Hannah Solway
Boris Worm
Tonya Wimmer
Derek P Tittensor
author_facet Hannah Solway
Boris Worm
Tonya Wimmer
Derek P Tittensor
author_sort Hannah Solway
collection DOAJ
description Baleen whales are among the largest marine megafauna, and while mostly well-protected from direct exploitation, they are increasingly affected by vessel traffic, interactions with fisheries, and climate change. Adverse interactions, notably vessel strikes and fishing gear entanglement, often result in distress, injury, or death for these animals. In Atlantic Canadian waters, such negative interactions or 'incidents' are consistently reported to marine animal response organizations but have not yet been analyzed relative to the spatial distribution of whales and vessels. Using a database of 483,003 whale sightings, 1,110 incident reports, and 82 million hours of maritime vessel activity, we conducted a spatiotemporal vulnerability analysis for all six baleen whale species occurring in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean by developing an ensemble of habitat-suitability models. The relative spatial risk of vessel-induced incidents was assessed for present (1985-2015) and projected near-future (2035-2055) distributions of baleen whales. Areas of high habitat suitability for multiple baleen whale species were intrinsically linked to sea surface temperature and salinity, with multispecies hotspots identified in the Bay of Fundy, Scotian Shelf, Laurentian Channel, Flemish Cap, and Gulf of St. Lawrence. Present-day model projections were independently evaluated using a separate database of acoustic detections and found to align well. Regions of high relative incident risk were projected close to densely inhabited regions, principal maritime routes, and major fishing grounds, in general coinciding with reported incident hotspots. While some high-risk regions already benefit from mitigation strategies aimed at protecting North Atlantic Right Whales, our analysis highlights the importance of considering risks to multiple species, both in the present day and under continued environmental change.
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spelling doaj-art-e8cf3ca145624d56979a685cef98dfba2025-02-05T05:31:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01201e031590910.1371/journal.pone.0315909Assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the Northwest Atlantic.Hannah SolwayBoris WormTonya WimmerDerek P TittensorBaleen whales are among the largest marine megafauna, and while mostly well-protected from direct exploitation, they are increasingly affected by vessel traffic, interactions with fisheries, and climate change. Adverse interactions, notably vessel strikes and fishing gear entanglement, often result in distress, injury, or death for these animals. In Atlantic Canadian waters, such negative interactions or 'incidents' are consistently reported to marine animal response organizations but have not yet been analyzed relative to the spatial distribution of whales and vessels. Using a database of 483,003 whale sightings, 1,110 incident reports, and 82 million hours of maritime vessel activity, we conducted a spatiotemporal vulnerability analysis for all six baleen whale species occurring in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean by developing an ensemble of habitat-suitability models. The relative spatial risk of vessel-induced incidents was assessed for present (1985-2015) and projected near-future (2035-2055) distributions of baleen whales. Areas of high habitat suitability for multiple baleen whale species were intrinsically linked to sea surface temperature and salinity, with multispecies hotspots identified in the Bay of Fundy, Scotian Shelf, Laurentian Channel, Flemish Cap, and Gulf of St. Lawrence. Present-day model projections were independently evaluated using a separate database of acoustic detections and found to align well. Regions of high relative incident risk were projected close to densely inhabited regions, principal maritime routes, and major fishing grounds, in general coinciding with reported incident hotspots. While some high-risk regions already benefit from mitigation strategies aimed at protecting North Atlantic Right Whales, our analysis highlights the importance of considering risks to multiple species, both in the present day and under continued environmental change.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315909
spellingShingle Hannah Solway
Boris Worm
Tonya Wimmer
Derek P Tittensor
Assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the Northwest Atlantic.
PLoS ONE
title Assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the Northwest Atlantic.
title_full Assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the Northwest Atlantic.
title_fullStr Assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the Northwest Atlantic.
title_full_unstemmed Assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the Northwest Atlantic.
title_short Assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the Northwest Atlantic.
title_sort assessing changing baleen whale distributions and reported incidents relative to vessel activity in the northwest atlantic
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0315909
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AT tonyawimmer assessingchangingbaleenwhaledistributionsandreportedincidentsrelativetovesselactivityinthenorthwestatlantic
AT derekptittensor assessingchangingbaleenwhaledistributionsandreportedincidentsrelativetovesselactivityinthenorthwestatlantic