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Identifying the Relevant Local Population for Environmental Impact Assessments of Mobile Marine Fauna

机译:确定相关本地人口,以便进行移动海洋动物的环境影响评估

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Environmental impact assessments must be addressed at an appropriate scale of biological organization for the species affected. It can be challenging to identify the relevant local wildlife population for impact assessment for those species that are continuously distributed and highly mobile. Here, we document the existence of local communities of Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops aduncus) inhabiting coastal and estuarine waters of Perth, Western Australia, where major coastal developments have been undertaken or are proposed. Using sighting histories from a four-year photo-identification study, we investigated fine-scale, social community structure of dolphins based on measures of social affinity and network (Half-Weight Index - HWI, preferred dyadic association tests, and Lagged Association Rates - LAR), home ranges, residency patterns (Lagged Identification Rates - LIR), and genetic relatedness. Analyses revealed four socially and spatially distinct, mixed-sex communities. The four communities had distinctive social patterns varying in strength, site fidelity and residency patterns. Overlap in home ranges and relatedness explained little to none of the association patterns between individuals, suggesting complex local social structures. The study demonstrated that environmental impact assessments for mobile, continuously distributed must evaluate impacts in light of local population structure, especially where proposed developments may affect core habitats of resident communities or sub-populations. Here, the risk of local extinction is particularly significant for an estuarine community because of its small size, limited connectivity with adjacent communities, and use of areas subject to intensive human use. In the absence of information about fine-scale population structure, impact assessments may fail to consider the appropriate biological context.
机译:对于受影响的物种,必须以适当的生物组织规模处理环境影响评估。确定持续分布和高度移动的物种对相关的当地野生动植物种群进行影响评估可能具有挑战性。在这里,我们记录了居住在西澳大利亚州珀斯的沿海和河口水域的印太太平洋宽吻海豚(Tursiops aduncus)当地社区的存在,那里已经或正在提议进行重大沿海开发。利用四年的照片识别研究中的目击历史记录,我们基于社交亲和力和网络(半体重指数-HWI,首选二元联想测验和滞后联想率- LAR),居住范围,居住模式(滞后识别率-LIR)和遗传相关性。分析揭示了四个社会和空间上不同的混合性社区。这四个社区具有独特的社会模式,其强度,场所逼真度和居住模式各不相同。家庭范围和亲密性的重叠几乎没有解释个体之间的关联模式,这表明当地社会结构复杂。该研究表明,对于连续分布的流动性环境影响评估必须根据当地人口结构评估其影响,尤其是在拟议的开发活动可能影响居民社区或亚人群的核心栖息地的情况下。在这里,由于河口社区规模小,与邻近社区的连通性有限以及对人类密集使用区域的使用,当地灭绝的风险对河口社区尤其重要。在缺乏有关小规模人口结构的信息的情况下,影响评估可能无法考虑适当的生物学背景。

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