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Challenges and priorities for river cetacean conservation

Endangered Species Research 2022 20 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jeffrey C. Mangel, Elizabeth Campbell, Joanna Alfaro‐Shigueto, Joanna Alfaro‐Shigueto, Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Joanna Alfaro‐Shigueto, Brendan J. Godley Joanna Alfaro‐Shigueto, Enzo Aliaga‐Rossel, Ellen Hines, Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Zhigang Mei, Isabel Beasley, Zhigang Mei, Yurasi Briceño, Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Joanna Alfaro‐Shigueto, Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Elizabeth Campbell, Susana Caballero, VMF da Silva, Miriam Marmontel, Brendan J. Godley VMF da Silva, Joanna Alfaro‐Shigueto, Cédric Gilleman, Cédric Gilleman, Brendan J. Godley Waleska Gravena, Brendan J. Godley Ellen Hines, Md. Shakhaoath Khan, Uzma Khan, Jeffrey C. Mangel, Ellen Hines, Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Daniëlle Kreb, Brendan J. Godley Jeffrey C. Mangel, Joanna Alfaro‐Shigueto, Miriam Marmontel, Zhigang Mei, VJ Mintzer, VJ Mintzer, Federico Mosquera-Guerra, Jeffrey C. Mangel, M Oliveira-da-Costa, M Oliveira-da-Costa, Mariana Paschoalini, Shambhu Paudel, Daniëlle Kreb, Brendan J. Godley R.J. Sinha, Jeffrey C. Mangel, R.J. Sinha, Smith Bd, Smith Bd, Brendan J. Godley S P Turvey, S P Turvey, V. Utreras, V. Utreras, PA Van Damme, PA Van Damme, Jeffrey C. Mangel, Deheng Wang, TS Whitty, TS Whitty, RH Thurstan, RH Thurstan, Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley Brendan J. Godley

Summary

This review synthesizes 280 studies on river cetacean conservation, identifying habitat degradation, bycatch, vessel strikes, and pollution — including plastic contamination — as the primary threats to freshwater dolphin and porpoise populations in China, South Asia, and South America.

Study Type Environmental

River cetaceans are particularly vulnerable to anthropogenic impacts due to their constrained ranges in freshwater systems of China, South Asia, and South America. We undertook an exhaustive review of 280 peer-reviewed papers and grey literature reports (1998-2020) to examine the current status of knowledge regarding these cetaceans and their conservation. We aimed to better understand the scale of threats they face, and to identify and propose priority future efforts to better conserve these species. We found that the species have been studied with varying frequency and that most of the research on threats has focused on habitat degradation and fragmentation (43%, mainly driven by dams and extractive activities such as sand mining and deforestation), and fishery interactions (39%, in the form of bycatch and direct take). These threats occur across all species, but more information is needed, primarily on quantifying the population impacts as a basis for designing mitigation measures. Other threats identified include pollution, vessel collisions, traditional use, and poorly managed tourism. Emerging methods such as environmental DNA and unmanned aerial vehicles are described for studying these species. Promising conservation interventions include cetacean-specific protected areas, natural ex situ protection, community-led conservation, and education programmes. However, transnational political will is required for a step change towards broad-scale protection in freshwater environments. In addition, we propose increasing capacity building, developing management plans, working closely with fishing communities, enhancing public awareness, expanding regional collaborations, and diversifying funding.

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