Document of dataset 7935

https://marineinfo.org/doc/dataset/7935

Dataset record

Type
Dataset
title in English
Monitoring diving and space-use by harbour seals across the Irish Sea region to better understand behaviour, and identify and mitigate interactions with anthropogenic activities.
Acronym
SMUCC
Description in English
Telemetry studies are a useful tool for assessing potential interactions between marine biota and anthropogenic activities. For seals, that are exposed to multiple threats stemming from, for example, aquaculture and commercial fisheries alongside specifically noise-generating activities such as shipping, oil and gas exploration and marine contraction projects, GPS-GSM tags can be used to track movements in near-real time across large spatial extents for a period of several months. This information can then be used to assess interactions between seals and these potentially impactful anthropogenic activities. Here, we focus on tracking the behaviours and distributions of rehabilitated juvenile harbour seals, that may be particularly vulnerable to disturbance from human interference. Using Fastloc technology, which requires less than 1 second at the surface to obtain a fix, tags were programmed to record a location roughly every 15 minutes, subsequently providing high resolution data on seal movements. Tags also had an inbuilt time-depth recorder, programmed to log summarised dive events (summarised using a broken-stick algorithm to 10 inflexion points including the maximum depth). Together this information was transmitted by the GSM mobile phone network when a seal came within range. This data is/was collected as part of the INTERREG funded SeaMonitor project, with an aim to better understand the dive behaviour, movements, space use (alongside interactions with anthropogenic activities), and survival of rehabilitated juvenile harbour seals from Northern Ireland.
Abstract in English
we focus on tracking the behaviours and distributions of rehabilitated juvenile harbour seals, that may be particularly vulnerable to disturbance from human interference. Using Fastloc technology, which requires less than 1 second at the surface to obtain a fix, tags were programmed to record a location roughly every 15 minutes, subsequently providing high resolution data on seal movements. Tags also had an inbuilt time-depth recorder, programmed to log summarised dive events. Together this information was transmitted by the GSM mobile phone network when a seal came within range. This data is/was collected as part of the INTERREG funded SeaMonitor project, with an aim to better understand the dive behaviour, movements, space use (alongside interactions with anthropogenic activities), and survival of rehabilitated juvenile harbour seals from Northern Ireland.
License
https://spdx.org/licenses/CC-BY-4.0.html
bibliographicCitation
Jessopp, M., Cox, SL., 2020. Monitoring diving and space-use by harbour seals across the Irish Sea region to better understand behaviour, and identify and mitigate interactions with anthropogenic activities.

Temporal coverage

Temporal
Start date
2019-10-1
End date
2022-12-31

Geographical coverage

Spatial
https://www.marineregions.org/mrgid/3250

Thesaurus terms

Keyword
Acoustic data
Acoustic telemetry
Acoustic Telemetry
Acoustic tracking
Animal movement
Anthropogenic factors
Depth measurement
Harbour seals
Marine mammals
Noise pollution
Rehabilitation
Space utilization
Tags

Themes

theme
Biology
Biology > Acoustics
Biology > Ecology - biodiversity
Biology > Mammals

Taxonomic terms

Taxon keywords
Phoca vitulina (Linnaeus, 1758)
Pinnipedia

Dataset references

is part of
https: //marineinfo.org/id/dataset/5912

Projects

was generated by
https://marineinfo.org/id/project/4998

Special collections

part of special collection
European Tracking Network

Document metadata

date created
2021-12-02
date modified
2023-05-30