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  4. Vulnerability Of A Top Marine Predator To Coastal Storms: A Relationship Between Hydrodynamic Drivers And Stranding Rates Of Newborn Pinnipeds
 
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Vulnerability Of A Top Marine Predator To Coastal Storms: A Relationship Between Hydrodynamic Drivers And Stranding Rates Of Newborn Pinnipeds

Date Issued
2020-07-30
Author(s)
Sepúlveda, Maritza  
Facultad de Ciencias  
Winckler, Patricio  
Facultad de Ingeniería  
Renato A. Quiñones
César Esparza
Pablo Carrasco
DOI
10.1038/s41598-020-69124-6
WoS ID
WOS:000559797100025
Abstract
Abstract Coastal storms have increased in recent decades, affecting many species, including the South American sea lion ( Otaria byronia ). Reports of stranded sea lion pups are becoming common in Chile, presumably due to the increase in the frequency and intensity of coastal storms. To validate this assumption, a 10-year database was built by coupling wave generation and coastal propagation models to correlate pure wave parameters (significant wave height Hs, peak period Tp, normalized wave power Hs 2 Tp) and wave parameters including the tidal level (maximum surface elevation η, modified wave power η 2 Tp) with records of stranded pups in Cobquecura, the largest breeding colony in central Chile. The correlation between the number of pups stranded per day and wave parameters in the first half of January and the last half of February is poor, while they are stronger for the second half of January and the first half of February. The higher number of stranded pups coincide with coastal storms with normalized wave power values exceeding a threshold of 100 m 2 /s. Conversely, below this threshold there is wide dispersion between the number of strandings and wave parameters. Identifying wave parameter thresholds could be used to predict when newborn pups will be most affected by coastal storms, and thus help institutions to develop remediation techniques for animals at risk.
Subjects

Multidisciplinary Sci...

Multidisciplinary

OCDE Subjects

Natural Sciences::Oth...

Quartile (Date Issued)
Q1
License
acceso abierto
Open Science Path
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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