@article{cacb416b04a14c85bb8fb0ed432f5c97,
title = "Contrasting ecological information content in whaling archives with modern cetacean surveys for conservation planning and identification of historical distribution changes",
abstract = "Many species are restricted to a marginal or suboptimal fraction of their historical range due to anthropogenic impacts, making it hard to interpret their ecological preferences from modern-day data alone. However, inferring past ecological states is limited by the availability of robust data and biases in historical archives, posing a challenge for policy makers. To highlight how historical records can be used to understand the ecological requirements of threatened species and inform conservation, we investigated sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus) distribution in the Western Indian Ocean. We assessed differences in information content and habitat suitability predictions based on whale occurrence data from Yankee whaling logs (1792–1912) and from modern cetacean surveys (1995–2020). We built maximum entropy habitat suitability models containing static (bathymetry-derived) variables to compare models comprising historical-only and modern-only data. Using both historical and modern habitat suitability predictions we assessed marine protected area (MPA) placement by contrasting suitability in- and outside MPAs. The historical model predicted high habitat suitability in shelf and coastal regions near continents and islands, whereas the modern model predicted a less coastal distribution with high habitat suitability more restricted to areas of steep topography. The proportion of high habitat suitability inside versus outside MPAs was higher when applying the historical predictions than the modern predictions, suggesting that different marine spatial planning optimums can be reached from either data sources. Moreover, differences in relative habitat suitability predictions between eras were consistent with the historical depletion of sperm whales from coastal regions, which were easily accessed and targeted by whalers, resulting in a modern distribution limited more to steep continental margins and remote oceanic ridges. The use of historical data can provide important new insights and, through cautious interpretation, inform conservation planning and policy, for example, by identifying refugee species and regions of anticipated population recovery.",
keywords = "baselines, cachalote, cambio de distribuci{\'o}n, ecolog{\'i}a hist{\'o}rica, especie refugiada, historical ecology, l{\'i}nea de base, niche, nicho, range shift, refugee species, residual, sperm whale",
author = "Letessier, {Tom B.} and Laura Mannocci and Brittney Goodwin and Clare Embling and {de Vos}, Asha and Anderson, {R. Charles} and Ingram, {Simon N.} and Andy Rogan and Turvey, {Samuel T.}",
note = "Funding Information: We thank V. Ridoux and the PELAGIS Observatory—UMS 3462 (La Rochelle University—CNRS) and Office Fran{\c c}ais de la Biodiversit{\'e} for the access to aerial observations of the REMMOA South West Indian Ocean survey. We thank P. Sabarros and P. Bach (IRD) for facilitating access to fishery data. We are grateful to MRAG Ltd for their data on daily observations of cetaceans in the Chagos Archipelago (BIOT), particularly J. Clark for data curation and T. Franklin, S. Browning, D. Hughes, R. Hartnell, J. White, and Y. Barnes. We thank M. Procknik from the New Bedford Whaling Museum for help with accessing whaling logs and The Science Museum, London, for use of their microfilm reader. We thank N. Casajus for his assistance with coding of the R compendium, R. Chang at the Royal Veterinary College for advice on statistics and methodology, and P. Boersch‐Supan and C. Collins for assisting with GIS and extraction of geomorphic features. T.B.L. was funded by the synthesis center CESAB of the French Foundation for Research on Biodiversity (FRB; www.fondationbiodiversite.fr ), the Mediterranean Centre for Environment and Biodiversity Laboratory of Excellence (CeMEB LabEx) ( https://www.labex‐cemeb.org ), and the Bertarelli Program in Marine Science. Funding Information: We thank V. Ridoux and the PELAGIS Observatory—UMS 3462 (La Rochelle University—CNRS) and Office Fran{\c c}ais de la Biodiversit{\'e} for the access to aerial observations of the REMMOA South West Indian Ocean survey. We thank P. Sabarros and P. Bach (IRD) for facilitating access to fishery data. We are grateful to MRAG Ltd for their data on daily observations of cetaceans in the Chagos Archipelago (BIOT), particularly J. Clark for data curation and T. Franklin, S. Browning, D. Hughes, R. Hartnell, J. White, and Y. Barnes. We thank M. Procknik from the New Bedford Whaling Museum for help with accessing whaling logs and The Science Museum, London, for use of their microfilm reader. We thank N. Casajus for his assistance with coding of the R compendium, R. Chang at the Royal Veterinary College for advice on statistics and methodology, and P. Boersch-Supan and C. Collins for assisting with GIS and extraction of geomorphic features. T.B.L. was funded by the synthesis center CESAB of the French Foundation for Research on Biodiversity (FRB; www.fondationbiodiversite.fr), the Mediterranean Centre for Environment and Biodiversity Laboratory of Excellence (CeMEB LabEx) (https://www.labex-cemeb.org), and the Bertarelli Program in Marine Science. Open access publishing facilitated by The University of Western Australia, as part of the Wiley - The University of Western Australia agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Authors. Conservation Biology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Society for Conservation Biology.",
year = "2023",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1111/cobi.14043",
language = "English",
volume = "37",
journal = "Conservation Biology",
issn = "0888-8892",
publisher = "John Wiley & Sons",
number = "3",
}