30 March 2008

Primi volontari a Vonitsa


Si è da poco concluso il primo turno di partecipanti al progetto di ricerca Dolphins of Greece condotto dall’Istituto Tethys in collaborazione con l'Earthwatch Institute.

I ricercatori Tethys Joan Gonzalvo e Carlo Della Libera sono stati affiancati per dieci giorni da quattro volontari di Earthwatch: Egon e Margrit (Germania), Judith e Marianne (Stati Uniti).

I volontari hanno partecipato attivamente a tutti gli aspetti del lavoro, tra cui ricerca dei delfini, raccolta di dati su campo, analisi dei dati alla base di ricerca.

Il gruppo non si è arreso alle condizioni avverse di alcuni giorni (pioggia fitta in due occasioni) ed è riuscito a portare a casa un buon bottino: 362 km di survey e 7 avvistamenti di tursiope (più sei di pellicani!).

Ma questo è solo l’inizio: la lunga stagione di ricerca che vede il coinvolgimento di volontari Earthwatch terminerà a metà ottobre.

Silvia Bonizzoni

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Per maggiori informazioni:
www.tethys.org
www.earthwatch.org

29 March 2008

Our Friends the Dolphins in Arabic


Our Friends the Dolphins is now available in Arabic!

The colouring booklet for children features dolphins, the threats they face and some ways of protecting them. It had already been made available in English, French, German, Greek and Italian.

This new version was produced thanks to Lobna Ben Nakhla, Programme Officer of UNEP's Regional Activity Centre for Specially Protected Areas.

The booklet is hosted in the Education section of the Cetacean Alliance web site and can be viewed online in two formats, or downloaded as a pdf file and printed.

Have a look at Our Friends the Dolphins

SB

27 March 2008

Dolphins in a bottle


Giovanni Bearzi and other four researchers from the Tethys Research Institute recently published a paper reporting the work done in the Gulf of Amvrakikos during 2002-2005, resulting in the individual identification of 148 bottlenose dolphins.

This work shows that dolphin density and levels of site fidelity are high, and this was related primarily to prey availability, particularly of epipelagic schooling fish.

The importance of this semi-closed basin for bottlenose dolphins and other threatened species such as marine turtles and endangered birds supports the adoption of measures aimed to conserve its valuable ecosystems and raise the naturalistic profile of the area, while promoting environment-conscious development.

Paraphrasing the famous song by The Police, Dolphins in a Bottle sends a S.O.S. to the world to protect these unique animals and their environment, and we hope that someone gets it :-)

Silvia Bonizzoni

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Bearzi G, Agazzi S., Bonizzoni S., Costa M., Azzellino A. 2008. Dolphins in a bottle: abundance, residency patterns and conservation of bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus in the semi-closed eutrophic Amvrakikos Gulf, Greece. Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems 18(2):130-146. (502 Kb)

26 March 2008

Squalo grigio nel Golfo di Amvrakikos


Le ricerche nel Golfo di Amvrakikos continuano tutto l’anno e, grazie alla presenza sul campo del ricercatore Tethys Joan Gonzalvo, permettono di avere un quadro completo su quello che succede in questo bacino semi-chiuso.

Nella notte di Pasqua, Joan è stato avvertito da un amico pescatore della cattura di un grosso squalo. L’animale, una femmina di squalo grigio (Carcharhinus plumbeus) lunga 170 cm, era rimasto intrappolato in una rete da posta ed era ancora vivo.

Non è la prima volta che i ricercatori Tethys sentono parlare di squali nel Golfo di Amvrakikos, ma quella di Joan è sicuramente la prima documentazione diretta.

Nonostante il triste destino dell’animale (nalla foto, sul banco di una pescheria), e gli inutili tentativi di Joan di farlo rilasciare, è bello sapere che nel Golfo, oltre a delfini, tartarughe marine, torpedini, gamberi e pesci, ci sia occasionalmente anche qualche squalo a tenere alta la bandiera della biodiversità.

Silvia Bonizzoni

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Per maggiori informazioni sullo squalo grigio:
http://www.medsharks.org
http://www.fishbase.org

23 March 2008

Hector dolphins and bycatch


Hector’s and Maui’s dolphins are found only in New Zealand waters and their numbers have declined dramatically in recent years. Hector dolphins have dropped from an estimated population of 26,000 in the 1970s to under 7,000 today.

The situation for the Maui's dolphin, a subspecies of the Hector’s dolphin classified as Critically Endangered in the IUCN Red List of Threatened Animals, is even worse: 
90% of these animals have died in fishing nets and the latest survey indicated a population of only 111.

Most of the bycatch occurs in gill and trawl nets. These fishing methods have pushed the two dolphin populations to the brink of extinction. Chris Howe, executive director of WWF's New Zealand branch, said that current fishing controls are failing to protect endangered dolphins. "All fishing with set nets and trawl nets should be banned throughout the range of Hector's and Maui's dolphins," Howe said. "That's the only way to ensure a slow-breeding, rare species can recover."

New Zealand is now being urged by conservationists to do more to protect these animals. They claim that only complete protection against fishing-related mortality will save these dolphins from extinction. A decision on the level of protection for Hector's and Maui's dolphins is currently under review by the New Zealand government.

Silvia Bonizzoni

Image: WWF New Zealand

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For more information:
www.wwf.org.nz/dolphin/
www.telegraph.co.uk (but please note that dolphins in the photo are common dolphins, not Mauis' dolphins)

21 March 2008

Banca dati sugli spiaggiamenti


E’ da poco accessibile online la Banca Dati Spiaggiamenti italiana (BDS), il cui scopo è rendere fruibili i dati relativi agli spiaggiamenti di cetacei, tra cui quelli raccolti dalla rete del Centro Studi Cetacei a partire dal 1986.

Il sito è consultabile dal pubblico per le informazioni generali, ma per visualizzare le schede dettagliate degli eventi è necessario registrarsi.

Responsabili dell’iniziativa - finanziata dal Ministero dell'Ambiente - sono Michela Podestà, Gianni Pavan e Elisabetta Bernuzzi, con il coordinamento del CIBRA dell’Università di Pavia e del Museo di Storia Naturale di Milano.

Il database consente di visualizzare i ritrovamenti sia come punti su una cartina (usando GoogleMaps), sia come schede. Molto utile è la possibilità di impostare come criterio una singola specie, il sesso e il numero degli individui, un tratto costiero, o le modalità del ritrovamento. Sono anche disponibili informazioni relative alle sedi dove rintracciare i campioni conservati e stabilire chi ne ha effettuato le analisi.

La Banca Dati Spiaggiamenti si propone come un utile strumento di indagine per i ricercatori che si occupano dello studio e della tutela di balene e delfini.

Francesca Zardin


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Per maggiori informazioni:
http://www.unipv.it/cibra/spiaggiamenti.html

20 March 2008

Global MPA database


MPA Global Database is a project that aims to create a database on the existing Marine Protected Areas, worldwide.

Based largely on information in the World Database on Protected Areas (WDPA), the project has two main goals: to develop a more robust global MPA baseline than currently exists, and to develop alternative scenarios of global MPA networks using spatial modelling techniques.

MPA Global Database contains a great variety of information such as: names of MPAs for each country, area covered and year of designation, mean area of MPAs, percentage of MPAs located in a specific latitude etc.

This database shows that 4435 MPAs exist worldwide and they cover an area of 2.35 million km2. These numbers sound misleadinly big, but the fact is: only 0.65% of the world oceans is covered by MPAs!

Even more impressive is the estimate of global no-take areas (areas where fishing is banned). The percentage of world oceans subject to this specific regulation is only 0.08% !

This database is a new tool for the marine conservation and shows how much still needs to be done to protect marine biodiversity.

Silvia Bonizzoni

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For more information:
http://mpaglobal.org
http://depts.washington.edu

19 March 2008

French driftnets killed by the European Court of Justice


Oceana, an international organization that works to protect and recover the oceans in the world, has announced that the European Court of Justice has refused to grant France exemption from the prohibition of the use of driftnets in the Mediterranean.

Driftnets used to catch bluefin tuna and swordfish were outlawed in the European Union from 2002 because they constitute a threat to the conservation of cetaceans, sea turtles and sharks. However, years after the ban entered into force, France and Italy have continued using driftnets. While operations in Italy have been downright illegal, the French fleet had taken advantage of legal loopholes to continue carrying out its activities, with full support from its government. French driftnets have caused significant mortality to striped dolphins in the waters of the Pelagos Sanctuary for Mediterranean cetaceans.

The European Court of Justice ruled that the French driftnet fleet should not have a temporary exemption from the ban as requested by its government. As such, France cannot offer the driftnet fleet its protection in 2008. Any fishing vessel using this gear to catch bluefin tuna must be sanctioned by French authorities.

Giuseppe Notarbartolo di Sciara

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For more information:
Oceana's press release, 17 March 2008

Bycaught dolphins on British coasts


A scaring number of dolphins and porpoises are washing up dead on British coasts.

Since the beginning of the year, 29 animals have been found on the beaches of south-west England. Experts suspect that most have drowned after being caught up in fishing nets.

Some dolphins have their tails or beaks amputated probably due to a useless attempt to free them from the nets, in other individuals bellies have been sliced open after death to try to make them sink.

Mark Simmonds, science director at the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, said: "It is a horrid way for these dolphins to die and you can see that when they come ashore. Fishermen are getting more adept at hiding the evidence and what we see on land is only a proportion of the problem."

On the other hand, Andy Wheeler, from the Cornish Fish Producers' Organisation, said: "Every reasonable effort is made by fishermen to avoid bycatch of dolphins. The jury is still out on whether the level of bycatch is a threat to the population."

Considering that the fishing effort is increasing worldwide, it’s time to increase also our effort to eliminate bycaught animals, whether cetaceans, birds, marine turtles, sharks or others.

Silvia Bonizzoni

Photo: WDCS

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For more information:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth
http://www.wdcs.org/news

18 March 2008

Salmon stocks are collapsing


After cod and tuna, one more fish stock is in trouble.

The Pacific Fishery Management Council has warned that, from northern Oregon to the Mexican border, the entire American west coast salmon season may have to be halted due to the collapse of crucial stocks in California’s major watershed.

Counts of young salmons, whose numbers have decreased sharply for two years, were the first major indication of the problem. The number of fish that survive more than a year in the ocean, or jacks, is a marker for the abundance of full-grown salmon the next year. Experts said that the 2007 count of the fall Chinook jacks from the Sacramento River was less than 6 percent of the long-term average.

The words from Robert Lohn, regional administrator for the National Marine Fisheries Service in Portland (Oregon), are less then encouraging: “The Central Valley fall Chinook salmon are in the worst condition since records began to be kept -- this is the largest collapse of salmon stocks in 40 years.” The problem is so serious that even the commercial fishermen understand that for this year there is no point lobbying for a higher quota, or any quota at all.

A number of possible reasons were called to explain the situation. Changes in the ocean currents, pollution, dams, water diversions, overfishing, habitat loss and changes in hatchery operations are some of the potential causative factors.

Silvia Bonizzoni

(Drawing by Massimo Demma)

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For more information:
http://www.independent.co.uk
http://www.nytimes.com
http://business.the-environmentalist.org

17 March 2008

ECS 2008

Foto: una parte del contingente Tethys presente al congresso.


Si è da poco concluso il 22mo congresso annuale dell’European Cetacean Society, tenutosi dal 10 al 12 marzo a Egmond aan Zee, in Olanda. Il tema del congresso, Mammiferi marini tra Passato, Presente e Futuro, ha consentito di approfondire diversi aspetti di questi animali meravigliosi: evoluzione, ecologia, bioacustica, comportamento, distribuzione, abbondanza, nuove tecniche di indagine e strategie di conservazione.

Il congresso è stato preceduto da workshop dedicati ai numerosi studenti presenti. Nell’ambito della sezione “Tecniche di ricerca applicate ai mammiferi marini” Simone Panigada, presidente dell’ECS e vicepresidente di Tethys, ha parlato delle tecniche di telemetria, mentre Peter Evans ha spiegato le potenzialità della foto-identificazione nell’ era del digitale.

Nel corso dei tre giorni del congresso 43 relatori provenienti da tutto il mondo hanno presentato a una platea di 400 tra ricercatori e studenti i risultati delle loro attività. Tra questi Caterina Lanfredi, ricercatrice di Tethys, che ha presentato un lavoro sull’utilizzo di un modello di regressione logistica atto a predire la distribuzione dei cetacei sulla base di alcuni parametri oceanografici.

Particolarmente apprezzato è stato l’intervento di Peter Madsen, del Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, sui meccanismi che presiedono alla produzione di click nel capodoglio.

Nella sessione relativa ai poster, per l’Istituto Tethys erano presenti Stefano Agazzi con un lavoro sull’andamento demografico del delfino comune in mar Ionio orientale, Joan Gonzalvo con un lavoro sul rapporto tra l’impatto della pesca e il declino del delfino comune nella stessa zona, e Nino Pierantonio con un poster sul capodoglio nel Santuario Pelagos. Infine Francesca Zardin, assistente del CSR, ha presentato un lavoro con il CIBRA di Pavia sulle vocalizzazioni del capodoglio.

L’edizione del 2008 verrà ricordata per il saluto di due figure di primo piano della cetologia europea: lasciano infatti il consiglio direttivo Peter Evans, al quale la sala ha dedicato un’emozionante standing ovation, e Thierry Jauniaux. La sensazione percepita da molti è che ci sia l’intenzione di lasciare più spazio a una promettente generazione di giovani ricercatori europei.

L’appuntamento per il 2009 è a Istanbul mentre nel 2010, anno mondiale della Biodiversità, sarà la cittadina di Stralsund, in Germania, ad accogliere i sempre più numerosi membri dell’ECS.

Mauro Colla

15 March 2008

Congresso dell'European Cetacean Society


Tra il 9 e il 12 marzo, in Olanda, si è tenuto il XXII Congresso della European Cetacean Society (ECS), il cui tema principale era “Passato, presente e futuro dei mammiferi marini”.

Il congresso è stato aperto da Simone Panigada, presidente dell’ECS e vicepresidente dell’Istituto Tethys, e ha visto la partecipazione di numerosi studenti ed esperti europei.

Diversi i temi trattati, tra cui: distribuzione e conservazione dei cetacei, fisiologia e anatomia, alimentazione, acustica e comportamento, stime di abbondanza e modellistica.

Una delegazione Tethys composta da quindici persone ha partecipato attivamente all’evento. Sono stati presentati numerosi lavori relativi alle ricerche svolte dall’Istituto in Mar Ligure e in Grecia.

Simone Panigada ha fatto anche una presentazione al workshop degli studenti per illustrare l'utilizzo di tecniche di rilevamento (attive e passive) per il campionamento del comportamento dei cetacei.

Durante la sessione ‘video night’, sono stati infine mostrati due spettacolari video prodotti da earthOCEAN; il primo – Life in the Trenches – relativo alle ricerche condotte dal Pelagos Cetacean Research Institute sui capodogli delle acque greche, il secondo – Disappearing Dolphins – sulle ricerche svolte da Tethys sui delfini comuni e i tursiopi nel Mar Ionio orientale.

Il prossimo appuntamento è previsto per marzo 2009 e avrà luogo a Istanbul, in Turchia.

Silvia Bonizzoni

14 March 2008

Distance sampling workshops


During this summer 2008, the Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmental Modelling (CREEM) is hosting two workshops on distance sampling techniques.

The aim of these workshops is to train participants in the latest methods for design and analysis of distance sampling surveys, including line and point transects. The workshops are taught by leading researchers in the field, such as the well-known Steve Buckland, using industry-standard software.

The first workshop - Introduction to Distance Sampling (August, 19th - 22nd) - will run at an preliminary level, and will focus on "conventional" distance sampling methods. The second - Advanced Techniques in Distance Sampling (August, 25th - 27th) - will cover recent advances in distance sampling research and software.

Both workshops will take place at the University of St. Andrews, Scotland.

If you are interested, please note that 1) the number of participants on each workshop will be restricted to 35; 2) a discount for students is available; 3) participants are encouraged to bring their own data sets and can expect to do some preliminary analyses with their data.

Registration for the event is already open!

Silvia Bonizzoni

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For more information:
www.ruwpa.st-and.ac.uk/distance.workshops

13 March 2008

Insert coin


WDCS The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, the world's most active charity dedicated to the conservation and welfare of cetaceans, released a new creative and funny clip, that was broadcasted on German TV channels.

The goal is to raise awareness of the need to protect these magnificent animals from whaling and from the growing impact of fisheries, and to call for public support.

The clip is in German, but the message is totally understandable. Have a look!

Silvia Bonizzoni

12 March 2008

Crazy race for the last Mediterranean tuna


A new WWF report, 126 pages long, provides the first real estimate of the actual catch capability of the Mediterranean purse seine fleet targeting bluefin tuna.

The results are discouraging: few tuna stocks left are driven by unregulated and unsustainable fisheries to a tragic end point.

Without considering the potential catch from other fleets, such as pelagic trawlers, longliners etc., the Mediterranean purse seine fleet has a calculated yearly catch potential of 54,783 metric tonnes. This amount is twice the fishing capacity of current quotas and more than 3.5 times the catch levels recommended by scientists to avoid stock collapse.

Since 1997 there has been a large expansion of the Mediterranean purse seine fleet. In the coastal waters of western Greece, the Tethys Research Institute registered a steady decline in the encounter rate of top predators including common dolphins and tuna (see paper about the decline of marine megafauna and the video Disappearing Dolphins).

How could we ever get to this point? Systematic upward adjustment of quotas, under-reporting of catches, uncontrolled increase in fishing capacity, illegal fishing, ever-increasing market demand ever-expanding fleet size and efficiency... these are some ingredients of the foolish management that brought the tuna stocks to nearly collapse.

Sergi Tudela, Head of Fisheries at WWF Mediterranean, has a clear view of the situation: “The fishery is unsustainable in every way – economically, socially, and ecologically. The time to act is now – while there are still bluefin tuna to save in the Mediterranean”.

Silvia Bonizzoni

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For more information
http://www.panda.org
To download the report
http://assets.panda.org

10 March 2008

Ocean deserts


The world oceans are deeply affected by human activities, from pollution to resource overexploitation, but now there is a new problem.

The least biologically productive areas of the oceans are expanding much faster than predicted. This is the result of a new study conducted by researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the University of Hawaii.

The evidence of this expansion comes from data collected by a visual satellite sensor that reads reflective colour to measure the density of chlorophyll in phytoplankton, the microscopic organisms that are the base of the marine food web. Atlantic and Pacific Oceans are characterized by huge 'black' spots, which indicate zones of very low productivity. These zones, likened to deserts, now cover an estimated 51 million square kilometres in the two oceans and are replacing very fast adjacent prolific areas.

This change in ocean biology, probably linked to the warming of sea surface waters, can have deep consequences to all marine ecosystems. It may negatively affect all the marine food web from plankton to fishes, turtle and cetaceans.

Silvia Bonizzoni

(The image by NOAA shows black areas considered the least biologically productive)

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For more information:
www.noaanews.noaa.gov

09 March 2008

Individual recognition of dolphins reported by Pliny the Elder 1931 years ago


Cetacean research pioneers David and Melba Caldwell wrote in their 1972 book “The world of the bottlenosed dolphin” that the earliest example of the practice of prolonged observation of cetaceans based on the recognition of individuals over extended time was that of Pelorus Jack - a Risso’s dolphin observed between 1888 and 1912 swimming near ships crossing Cook Strait, between the northern and southern portions of New Zealand.

Recently my attention was pointed to a writing by Pliny the Elder which moves back the clock of such scientific method by 1,811 years!

In the 9th book of his Naturalis Historia, published in 77 A.D., the ancient naturalist wrote about dolphins: "They grow fast, and it is believed that they reach their maximum size at 10 years of age. They can reach the age of 30, as discovered through the experimental cutting of nicks on their tails" (Adolescunt celeriter, X annis putantur ad summam magnitudinem pervenire. Vivunt et tricenis, quod cognitum praecisa cauda in experimentum).

Giuseppe Notarbartolo di Sciara

07 March 2008

The Economics of the Global Loss of Biological Diversity


Between the 5th and 6th of March, the European Commission and the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety of Germany, organized an international workshop on "The Economics of the Global Loss of Biological Diversity".

The objective of this high-level workshop was to discuss the state of the art in assessing the economics costs associated with the loss of biodiversity. Over 100 experts in environmental economics and science from around the world gathered in Brussels (Belgium) to discuss ways of giving a value to biodiversity, and estimating the economic cost of human activities resulting in reduced ecosystem services.

Giovanni Bearzi - president of Tethys - was invited to attend the workshop based on his experience with the decline of short-beaked common dolphins in western Greece, and on the assessment recently done by Tethys of management measures (and related costs) required to mitigate ecosystem damage caused by fisheries.

Silvia Bonizzoni

02 March 2008

Using satellite images to protect the Ocean


Not everyone knows that satellite images can be used to support marine conservation.

The concept is simple. Satellites have global reach and can repeatedly capture images of any area, they can reveal the land/seascape disruption and habitat degradation caused by anthropogenic activities. They can be used to monitor industrial sites, logging operations, environmentally sensitive areas, urban sprawl, shipping traffic, fisheries, and resource-management practices, no matter where in the world they occur.

Also, they can be used to monitor fishing activities. Daniel Pauly, a world-renowned fisheries scientist, is the pioneer of this innovative idea. Pauly was inspired by a satellite image of a fleet of trawlers at work in the ocean. Looking at the image, he realized that trawlers could be seen so clearly that it would in theory be possible to monitor fishing from satellites and assess their impact. With historical and global archives, it is also possible to compare images to show changes over time. This kind of data could lead to restrictions on industrial fishing methods.

In addition to being a source of scientific data to document environmental change, satellite images may also represent a powerful communication tool. Using satellite photographs, we can document and communicate the impact of anthropogenic activities and promote a sustainable use of resources.

Silvia Bonizzoni

(The satellite photo shows mud trails made by shrimp trawlers off the mouth of the Yangtze River www.digitalglobe.com)
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For more information:
www.theglobeandmail.com
www.eurekalert.org
www.iht.com