by Valeria Ferrari, Emily Hague, Marija Sciberras, Karen A. Alexander, Patrick D.
O’Hara, Lauren McWhinnie Cetaceans face a multitude of well-recognised anthropogenic threats, many of which can be attributed to the activities of marine vessels that are increasing in number throughout the world’s oceans. This study applies a systematic map methodology to better understand the current state of knowledge on vessel impacts to cetaceans, and to identify data gaps relating to specific geographies, vessel types and species.
Literature searches were undertaken in January 2023 using three databases (Scopus, Web of Science, ProQuest), yielding 28,452 results. After duplicate removal and title, abstract and full-text screening, 568 documents were included in this review, resulting in 661 records of empirical evidence being extracted for further analysis.
These records highlighted a focus on certain species (bottlenose dolphins (n = 133) and humpback whales (n = 89)) and vessel types (e.g., eco-tourism boats (n = 145)), and the majority of records were from North American waters (n = 274).
PLOS ONE (Medicine) published a clinical update in Research Highlights on 07 May 2026.
The item focuses on Exploring the evidence of direct threats to cetaceans from maritime vessels: A systematic map.
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