Divers for the Environment September 2021

Page 30

FEATURE CREATURE

FEATURE CREATURE

INDO-PACIFIC FINLESS PORPOISE (NEOPHOCAENA PHOCAENOIDES ) FEATURE IUCN RED LIST 2017 PHOTOGRAPHY ADA NATOLI – UAE DOLPHIN PROJECT

RED LIST CATEGORY & CRITERIA: VULNERABLE Scientific Name: Neophocaena phocaenoides Synonym(s): Delphinus phocaenoides (G. Cuvier, 1829) Common Name: Indo-Pacific Finless Porpoise TAXONOMIC The recognition of two externally distinct morphological forms of Finless Porpoises as separate biological species, the Indo-Pacific Finless Porpoise (Neophocaena phocaenoides) and the Narrow-ridged Finless Porpoise (N. asiaeorientalis), was accepted only recently when it was demonstrated that the two forms are reproductively isolated (and likely have been separated since the last glacial maximum) even though they occur sympatrically in a fairly large area of eastern Asia (Wang et al. 2008, Jefferson and Wang 2011). [Much of the literature published before ca 2010 refers to all Finless Porpoises (both species) as N. phocaenoides.] Differences in the external morphology of the dorsal aspect of the two species are distinguishable even amongst free-ranging animals (as opposed to only specimens in-hand) (Wang et al. 2010). Intermediates between the two main forms have never been reported even though several hundreds to thousands of carcasses have been examined. The two species also 30

DIVERS FOR THE ENVIRONMENT | SEPTEMBER 2021

clearly differ in craniometry (Amano et al. 1992, Jefferson 2002). There is evidence to suggest subpopulation structure within Indo-Pacific Finless Porpoises in some areas (Jefferson 2002,Yang et al. 2008, Chen et al. 2010, Xu et al. 2010, Li et al. 2011, Ju et al. 2012, L. Li et al. 2013, S. Li et al. 2013, Jia et al. 2014, Lin et al. 2014) and this may apply throughout much of the species’ distribution. JUSTIFICATION With some of the largest concentrations of Humans in the world living along the shores of, and harvesting the resources from, the warm coastal waters inhabited by Indo-Pacific Finless Porpoises, the impacts of human activities on this species must be considerable. Partly because of their small size, which limits their strength to break free once entangled, phocoenids are exceptionally vulnerable to incidental mortality in gillnets (e.g., Jefferson and Curry 1994), and incidental mortality in fishing gear has been documented throughout the range of Indo-Pacific Finless Porpoises. Fishing effort with gear documented to catch Finless Porpoises accidentally (including gillnets, trawls, stow nets, and seines) is intense in many areas where the species occurs or occurred. Although not quantified as rigorously as for some N. asiaeorientalis populations, regional

declines (and possible local extirpations) of N. phocaenoides have been reported, presumably due to a combination of fishing pressure, coastal development and industrialisation, pollution, and heavy vessel traffic (Reeves et al. 1997, Collins et al. 2005, Braulik et al. 2010). The data are insufficient to make a rigorous quantitative assessment of population trend for this species in any part of its range, but the scale of threats is large enough over enough of the range to suspect and infer a decline of at least 30% over the last three generations (about 45 years, assuming 15 years/generation as estimated for N. asiaeorientalis by Moore 2015) (A2), over three generations into the future (A3), and over a three-generation period that includes both the past and the future (A4). The factor most responsible for such a decline would be incidental mortality in fisheries (subcriterion d, “exploitation”), but the loss and degradation of habitat (subcriterion c) and pollution (chemical and acoustic; subcriterion e) are likely contributing factors as well. None of the threats has been seriously addressed in any part of the species’ range, even though threat levels are presumably increasing. Therefore, the Indo-Pacific Finless Porpoise qualifies for Vulnerable under Red List criteria


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DAN Europe

1min
page 78

HEALTH

7min
pages 76-77

Zanzibar

19min
pages 64-75

Equipment Review

5min
pages 60-63

My Buddy

7min
pages 56-59

The Eyes are the Window to the Soul

5min
pages 52-55

Deep Dive Dubai

11min
pages 34-41

Feature Creature

13min
pages 30-33

Artificial Reefs

13min
pages 46-51

The Value of a 20-Year Coral Reef Dataset

4min
page 29

Dreamscape

4min
pages 42-45

Reef Check Malaysia

4min
page 28

Reef Check Kelp Forest Programme

3min
page 27

Reef Check Data

2min
page 26

PADI Launches New Job Board

2min
page 19

Dubai 92 Coral Reef Conservation

2min
pages 22-25

PADI Positions Membership as Mission Hubs

3min
page 18

PADI and the Ocean Cleanup Join Forces

2min
page 17

EAD to Continue Marine Scientific Research

4min
page 16

My Diving Experience

2min
page 21

EAD and Wetlands International Launch New Online Portal

4min
page 15

Welcoming the World

4min
page 10

Dugong and Seagrass Toolkit

4min
page 11

The EPAA of Sharjah and Zayed University

4min
pages 8-9

EDA Director’s Note

2min
page 5

EAD Uses Satellites to Track Three Rehabilitated Turtles

4min
page 14

A Virtual EDA Movie Screening

10min
pages 6-7

Largest Coral Reef Rehabilitation Project in the Region

4min
page 12

EAD Improves Marine Water Quality

4min
page 13
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