Occurrences des observations de la campagne REMMOA Antilles (2008)
Citation
RIDOUX V, Falchetto H (2016). Occurrences des observations de la campagne REMMOA Antilles (2008). Version 4.2. Observatoire PELAGIS, UMS 3462 Système d'Observation pour la Conservation des Mammifères et Oiseaux Marins, Université de la Rochelle-CNRS. Occurrence dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/67zxez accessed via GBIF.org on 2024-12-25.Description
La donnée associée met en évidence les occurrences d'observations de mammifères et oiseaux marins réalisées lors de la campagne d'acquisition de données d'Observation par survol aérien "REMMOA Antilles" (Recensement de la Mégafaune Marine par Observation Aérienne dans les Antilles française) réalisée par l'Observatoire PELAGIS.Sampling Description
Study Extent
In Guiana, the French EEZ (4–9°N, 49–54°W), spanning 132,000 km2, extends 200NM into the Atlantic Ocean, including a broad continental shelf, a slope, wider on its western part and an abyssal plain where depths approach 4500 m. The French EEZ in the Antilles (14–19°N, 57–64°W), spanning 143,000 km2, extends from Guadeloupe and Martinique Islands, 200NM into the Atlantic Ocean and 80NM into the Caribbean Sea and northward around St Barthélemy and St Martin islands.Sampling
Aerial surveys were based on standard line transect sampling (Buckland et al., 2001). Transects were sampled at a target altitude of 182 m (600 ft) and a ground speed of 90 knots (167 km·h−1). Survey platform was a Partenavia P68, a high-wing, double-engine aircraft equipped with bubble windows so that observers could scan right underneath the plane. Survey crew consisted in two trained observers observing with naked eyes and a flight leader in charge of data collection on a laptop computer. A GPS, logged to a computer equipped with ‘VOR’ software (designed for the aerial survey of the SCANS-II program Hammond et al., 2006), collected positional information every 2 s. Additionally, Beaufort Sea state, turbidity, glare, cloud coverage as well as an overall subjective assessment of sighting conditions were collected at the beginning of each track line and whenever any of these values changed. The general protocol corresponded to published protocols prepared for small cetaceans (e.g. SCANS programs, Hammond et al., 2002, 2006). In addition to this, presence and group size of larger cetaceans, seabirds, sea turtles and elasmobranches were collected as well. Information recorded included identification to the taxonomic level, group size and angle to the track line, measured with a hand-held clinometer. Together with the altitude of the aircraft, the angle provided the perpendicular distance of the animal from the track line, which allowed distance sampling analyses to be conducted (Buckland et al., 2001). However, for seabirds, data was collected using the strip transect methodology based on the assumption that all seabirds within the strip are detected (Eberhardt 1978; Tasker et al. 1984). This methodology was used in an attempt to avoid disrupting the attention of the observers from the target species (cetaceans) in areas of high seabird densities. Strip width was 500 m on both sides of the track line in the Antilles and 150 m in Guiana. Identification was made to the lowest taxonomic level whenever possible, but groupings were inevitable for animals that could not be told apart from the air. Brown terns and brown boobies are examples of such groupings in the AntillesMethod steps
- Les données d’observation, ainsi que l’effort et les conditions d’observation sont transférées dans une base de données sous MS Access 2000 après validation par les observateurs. Les cartes et les pré-analyses de distribution ont été réalisées avec le logiciel ArcGis 9.2 et son extension Spatial Analyst. Les données sont ensuite analysées sous le logiciel libre R pour la construction des modèles spatiaux.
Taxonomic Coverages
Geographic Coverages
In Guiana, the French EEZ (4–9°N, 49–54°W), spanning 132,000 km2,
extends 200NM into the Atlantic Ocean, including a broad continental
shelf, a slope, wider on its western part and an abyssal plain where
depths approach 4500 m.
The French EEZ in the Antilles (14–19°N, 57–64°W), spanning
143,000 km2, extends from Guadeloupe and Martinique Islands,
200NM into the Atlantic Ocean and 80NM into the Caribbean Sea
and northward around St Barthélemy and St Martin islands.
Bibliographic Citations
Contacts
Vincent RIDOUXoriginator
position: Directeur
Observatoire PELAGIS - UMS 3462
5 allée de l'Océan
17000
FR
Telephone: +33546449910
email: pelagis@univ-lr.fr
homepage: http://www.observatoire-pelagis.cnrs.fr
Hélène Falchetto
metadata author
position: Provider
Observatoire PELAGIS - UMS 3462
La Rochelle
17000
FR
email: pelagis@univ-lr.fr
homepage: http://www.observatoire-pelagis.cnrs.fr
Hélène Falchetto
administrative point of contact
position: Provider
Observatoire PELAGIS - UMS 3462
5, allée de l'Océan
La Rochelle
17000
FR
email: pelagis@univ-lr.fr
homepage: http://www.observatoire-pelagis.cnrs.fr
Vincent RIDOUX
administrative point of contact
position: Directeur
Observatoire PELAGIS - UMS 3462
5 allée de l'Océan
La Rochelle
17000
FR
Telephone: +33546449910
email: pelagis@univ-lr.fr
homepage: http://www.observatoire-pelagis.cnrs.fr