An Expert Elicitation of the Effects of Low Salinity Water Exposure on Bottlenose Dolphins

There is increasing concern over anthropogenically driven changes in our oceans and seas, from a variety of stressors. Such stressors include the increased risk of storms and precipitation, offshore industries and increased coastal development which can affect the marine environment. For some coasta...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cormac Booth, Len Thomas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Oceans
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2673-1924/2/1/11
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spelling doaj-f003125d9f68476fbca04157720959ae2021-02-15T00:00:41ZengMDPI AGOceans2673-19242021-02-0121117919210.3390/oceans2010011An Expert Elicitation of the Effects of Low Salinity Water Exposure on Bottlenose DolphinsCormac Booth0Len Thomas1SMRU Consulting, Scottish Oceans Institute, University of St Andrews, East Sands, Fife KY16 8LB, UKCentre for Research into Ecological & Environmental Modelling, University of St Andrews, The Observatory, Buchanan Gardens, St Andrews KY16 9LZ, UKThere is increasing concern over anthropogenically driven changes in our oceans and seas, from a variety of stressors. Such stressors include the increased risk of storms and precipitation, offshore industries and increased coastal development which can affect the marine environment. For some coastal cetacean species, there is an increased exposure to low salinity waters which have been linked with a range of adverse health effects in bottlenose dolphins. Knowledge gaps persist regarding how different time–salinity exposures affect the health and survival of animals. In such data-poor instances, expert elicitation can be used to convert an expert’s qualitative knowledge into subjective probability distributions. The management implications of this stressor and the subjective nature of expert elicitation requires transparency; we have addressed this here, utilizing the Sheffield Elicitation Framework. The results are a series of time response scenarios to estimate time to death in bottlenose dolphins, for use when data are insufficient to estimate probabilistic summaries. This study improves our understanding of how low salinity exposure effects dolphins, guiding priorities for future research, while its outputs can be used to support coastal management on a global scale.https://www.mdpi.com/2673-1924/2/1/11freshwatercetacean<i>Tursiops</i> sp.wildlife managementmarine biologysalinity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cormac Booth
Len Thomas
spellingShingle Cormac Booth
Len Thomas
An Expert Elicitation of the Effects of Low Salinity Water Exposure on Bottlenose Dolphins
Oceans
freshwater
cetacean
<i>Tursiops</i> sp.
wildlife management
marine biology
salinity
author_facet Cormac Booth
Len Thomas
author_sort Cormac Booth
title An Expert Elicitation of the Effects of Low Salinity Water Exposure on Bottlenose Dolphins
title_short An Expert Elicitation of the Effects of Low Salinity Water Exposure on Bottlenose Dolphins
title_full An Expert Elicitation of the Effects of Low Salinity Water Exposure on Bottlenose Dolphins
title_fullStr An Expert Elicitation of the Effects of Low Salinity Water Exposure on Bottlenose Dolphins
title_full_unstemmed An Expert Elicitation of the Effects of Low Salinity Water Exposure on Bottlenose Dolphins
title_sort expert elicitation of the effects of low salinity water exposure on bottlenose dolphins
publisher MDPI AG
series Oceans
issn 2673-1924
publishDate 2021-02-01
description There is increasing concern over anthropogenically driven changes in our oceans and seas, from a variety of stressors. Such stressors include the increased risk of storms and precipitation, offshore industries and increased coastal development which can affect the marine environment. For some coastal cetacean species, there is an increased exposure to low salinity waters which have been linked with a range of adverse health effects in bottlenose dolphins. Knowledge gaps persist regarding how different time–salinity exposures affect the health and survival of animals. In such data-poor instances, expert elicitation can be used to convert an expert’s qualitative knowledge into subjective probability distributions. The management implications of this stressor and the subjective nature of expert elicitation requires transparency; we have addressed this here, utilizing the Sheffield Elicitation Framework. The results are a series of time response scenarios to estimate time to death in bottlenose dolphins, for use when data are insufficient to estimate probabilistic summaries. This study improves our understanding of how low salinity exposure effects dolphins, guiding priorities for future research, while its outputs can be used to support coastal management on a global scale.
topic freshwater
cetacean
<i>Tursiops</i> sp.
wildlife management
marine biology
salinity
url https://www.mdpi.com/2673-1924/2/1/11
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