利用公民科学来推断新喀里多尼亚珊瑚礁蝠鲼(Mobula Alfredi)的特征和栖息地使用

Hugo Lassauce, Olivier Château, Laurent Wantiez
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摘要

摘要礁蝠鲼(Mobula alfredi)在新喀里多尼亚群岛的各个地方都被观察到。该物种在世界几个地区面临人类开发和活动的威胁,需要关于该物种生态的重要信息。这项研究是第一次调查新喀里多尼亚的种群,并着重于其特征和栖息地的利用。我们在四年(2015-2020年)的时间里利用公民科学从11个地点收集了1741张照片。蝠鲼独特的腹部颜色模式使391条个体得以识别。这些结果突出了该物种在群岛上的广泛分布,所有聚集点之间的连通性很少,只有5.4%的个体在多个地点观察到。通过重访率和居住分析,在所有被研究的地点都记录了强大和长期的地点保真度。该种群还记录了迄今为止已知的最高比例的黑色蝠鲼(43%),以及平衡的男女比例(1.0:1.15)。对损伤的分析报告了人为压力源的低影响,只有9.8%的损伤被认为是人为的。企图捕食率不高于世界其他地区,29.7%的个体遭受咬伤。我们的研究强调需要进一步调查空间生态和种群结构,以评估基本栖息地和解决潜在的局部威胁,从而为保护项目提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Using Citizen Science to Infer Characteristics and Habitat Use of Reef Manta Rays (Mobula Alfredi) in New Caledonia
Abstract Reef manta rays ( Mobula alfredi ) are observed at several sites in all parts of the archipelago of New Caledonia. The species faces threats from human exploitation and activity in several regions of the world and crucial information on the ecology of the species is needed. This study is the first to investigate the population of New Caledonia and focuses on its characteristics and its habitat use. We used citizen science over four years (2015–2020) to collect 1741 photo-identifications from 11 sites. The unique ventral coloration patterns of the manta rays allowed the identification of 391 individuals. These results highlight the widespread distribution of the species in the archipelago with little connectivity between all aggregations sites, with only 5.4% of the individuals observed at more than one site. Strong and long-term site fidelity was recorded at all studied sites through re-sighting rates and residency analysis. The population also records the highest known proportion of melanistic manta rays (43%) to date, and a balanced male : female ratio (1.0 : 1.15). The analysis of injuries reported a low impact from anthropogenic stressors, with only 9.8% of injuries judged to be of anthropogenic origin. Attempted predation rates were not higher than other location in the world with 29.7% of individuals bearing bite-related injuries. Our study highlights the need for further investigations on the spatial ecology and structure of the population to assess essential habitat and address potential localised threats, and thus, inform by conservation projects.
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