Predicting cetacean habitats beyond surveyed regions in Indonesian waters: species distribution model transferability may not always be preferable

A. Sahri*, Floor Maters, Muhammad Iqbal Herwata Putra, Putu Liza Kusuma Mustika, Danielle Kreb, R.J.A. van Lammeren

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference paperAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Understanding the distribution of cetaceans in Indonesian waters is imperative for their conservation management, however such information is lacking for the country. Our study predicted the species distributions of two cetacean species (common bottlenose dolphin and sperm whale) beyond the surveyed regions in Indonesian Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). This was done by using a combination of presence-only data, randomly generated pseudo-absences and environmental predictors variables within the Biomod2 framework in R. Ten potential predictor variables were identified, of which five were selected after correlation tests. Local Random Forest models were built to the extent of four small study regions, and later projected to the whole Indonesian EEZ. The common bottlenose dolphin local models showed preference for areas close to the coast and shallower waters. Sperm whale local predictions were located further into the open waters and at deeper waters. The extrapolated predictions into the Indonesian EEZ, however, showed some unexpected results. The high occurrences for common bottlenose dolphins were not only located close to the islands, but also more into open waters. In contrast, sperm whale distributions have high occurrences near coastal areas and in the vicinity of islands than in the open oceans. This information suggested that the transferability of species distribution models may not always be preferable, because provide low accuracy. Sighting data, choices of variables and model settings influenced the outcome of the extrapolated models. Despite the unpreferable of the extrapolations, the results are still beneficial for cetacean conservation purposes, since the study was able to identify potential habitats in unsurveyed regions.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationGeomatics International Conference 2023 27/07/2023 - 27/07/2023 Surabaya, Indonesia
PublisherIOP Publishing
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Dec 2023
EventGeomatics International Conference 2023: GEOSPATIAL TECHNOLOGY FOR MAPPING THE FUTURE: Integrated mapping for sustainable environment - Surabaya, Indonesia
Duration: 27 Jul 202327 Jul 2023
https://elib.its.ac.id/conf/geoicon/

Publication series

NameIOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science
Volume1276
ISSN (Electronic)1755-1315

Conference/symposium

Conference/symposiumGeomatics International Conference 2023
Abbreviated titleGEOICON
Country/TerritoryIndonesia
CitySurabaya
Period27/07/2327/07/23
Internet address

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