About the project
Numerous seabird and marine mammal species occur in the subtropical and subantarctic zones of the southern Indian Ocean. This project aims to model and identify the species- and community-level distribution of these charismatic animals to reveal ecosystem processes and patterns in the region and support spatial conservation and management initiatives.
Numerous seabird and marine mammal species occur in the subtropical and subantarctic zones of the southern Indian Ocean region. They breed, mount and rest at French, South African and Australian islands in the region and forage at sea in the Exclusive Economic Zones of these nations, the Convention Area, and Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction. Multi-species information on the at-sea distribution of these species is important for understanding ecosystem processes and patterns in the region and is a key component of any spatial conservation and management frameworks, but multi-species analyses are rare. Information on the distribution of marine predators is widely used to define priority areas for conservation and management, but multi-species, multi-data analyses are required. Such information on seabird and marine mammal distribution can be derived from animal-borne biotelemetry/biologging and at-sea sightings records.
Using data on the distribution of marine mammals and seabirds–collected mainly through long-term programmes at French and South African islands–this project aims to model and understand the species- and community-level distribution of seabirds and marine mammals southern Indian Ocean region to:
- predict areas of high ecological significance
- identify biogeographic structuring of marine predator communities, and
- support multinational spatial conservation and management initiatives in the region.
The project forms part of the international project PHOCIS: “Pelagic High seas OCean ecoregionalisation of the Indian Subantarctic”.
Analysis will be conducted in programme R, and basic experience with one of the programming environments R, Python or Matlab is essential.
As well as Dr Ryan Reisinger, you will also be supervised by organisations other than the University of Southampton, including
- Charles-Andre Bost
- Azwianewi B. Makhado from Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (South African Government)
- Pierre A. Pistorius from Nelson Mandela University