Document of dataset 8559

Dataset record

Type
Dataset
title in English
Cetacean sigthings in North Sea
Description in English

The density found was higher than previous studies have suggested for the central North Sea. The results correspond to recent observations of minke whale redistribution within the North Sea, and these may be related to a decline in sandeel availability elsewhere in the North Sea. Offshore banks that aggregate prey may therefore become increasingly important feeding habitats for minke whales and other top predators in the North Sea. The observed habitat preference of minke whales along this offshore bank appeared to be similar to that observed in coastal areas, and this suggests some degree of generality regarding the preference for this type of habitat. 

Purpose: As part of a geophysical seismic survey, marine mammals observations were carried out from three vessels: one seismic vessel, one supply vessel operating well ahead from the seismic vessel. The third vessel, MV ‘Andfjord’, carried out a dedicated Line Transect (LT) survey (23 April to 17 May). The LT vessel was surveying at distances of ≥20 km away from the geophysical vessel and followed predetermined line transects placed randomly in a zigzag pattern in the central (German) part of the survey area.

Abstract in English

Minke whales and other marine mammals were recorded in the central North Sea in an area characterised by frontal features and high productivity northeast of the Dogger Bank (4677 km2). Survey efforts were carried out from 28 March to 2 July 2007, at a finer scale than in earlier studies in the region, using 2 vessels as platforms of opportunity and a dedicated line- transect survey vessel following distance sampling methods. The high density of whales indicated that this offshore bank slope is an important spring habitat for minke whales in the North Sea. In total, 77 sightings of minke whales comprising 130 individuals were recorded. The peak density of minke whales was estimated to be 0.029 whales km–2 (minimum estimate, 95% CI: 0.012 to 0.070) in May. During peak abundance, the minke whales temporarily congregated in the area, suggesting that the whales were taking advantage of the local spring abundance of sandeels.

Contactpoint
Email
marijkedeboer@hotmail.com
License
https://spdx.org/licenses/CC-BY-NC-4.0.html
bibliographicCitation
Marijke N. de Boer. 2010. Spring distribution and density of minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata along an offshore bank in the central North Sea. Marine Ecology Progress Series. Vol. 408: 265–274.
Release date
Jun 15 2023 12:00AM

Temporal coverage

Temporal
Start date
2007-03-31
End date
2007-07-02

Geographical coverage

Spatial
ANE, North Sea

Thesaurus terms

Keyword
Bio-geographical regions
Biota
Environment
Geoscientific Information
Habitats and biotopes
Metadata non conformant
Metadata not evaluated
No limitations to public access
Occurrence
Oceans
Sea regions
WGS84 (EPSG:4326)
XYZ ASCII

Taxonomic terms

Taxon keywords
Balaenoptera acutorostrata
Cetacea
Delphinidae
Halichoerus grypus
Lagenorhynchus
Lagenorhynchus acutus
Lagenorhynchus albirostris
Megaptera novaeangliae
Phoca vitulina
Phocidae
Phocoena phocoena
Tursiops truncatus

Ownerships

creator
Marijke de Boer
creator
Wageningen Marine Research
contributor
Marijke de Boer
contributor
Wageningen Marine Research
contactPoint
Marijke de Boer
contactPoint
Wageningen Marine Research
contributor
Marine Geospatial Ecology Lab

Dataset references

record
European Ocean Biodiversity Information System

Special collections

part of special collection
available through EurOBIS
EMODNET

Document metadata

date created
2024-05-03
date modified
2025-03-26