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Featured researches published by Helena Herr.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2016

Large amounts of marine debris found in sperm whales stranded along the North Sea coast in early 2016

Bianca Unger; Elisa L. Bravo Rebolledo; Rob Deaville; Andrea Gröne; Lonneke L. IJsseldijk; Mardik F. Leopold; Ursula Siebert; Jérôme Spitz; Peter Wohlsein; Helena Herr

30 sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) stranded along the coasts of the North Sea between January and February 2016. The gastro-intestinal tracts of 22 of the carcasses were investigated. Marine debris including netting, ropes, foils, packaging material and a part of a car were found in nine of the 22 individuals. Here we provide details about the findings and consequences for the animals. While none of the items was responsible for the death of the animal, the findings demonstrate the high level of exposure to marine debris and associated risks for large predators, such as the sperm whale.


The International Journal of Marine and Coastal Law | 2011

Protection of Cetaceans in European Waters—A Case Study on Bottom-Set Gillnet Fisheries within Marine Protected Areas

Alexander Proelss; Monika Krivickaite; Anita Gilles; Helena Herr; Ursula Siebert

This article explores the legal regime of the protection of marine species and habitats within European waters by taking the protection of harbour porpoises in the German territorial sea and exclusive economic zone as an example. The analysis is based on a scientific assessment of the occurrence of and the anthropogenic impacts on harbour porpoises in the North Sea. The relationship between the protection of marine species within the European Union (EU) on the one hand and the Common Fisheries Policy of the EU on the other constitutes a classic example of a user-environment conflict. The article explores how such conflicts ought to be solved under the pertinent legal rules.


Marine Environmental Research | 2017

Marine debris in harbour porpoises and seals from German waters

Bianca Unger; Helena Herr; Harald Benke; M. Böhmert; Patricia Burkhardt-Holm; Michael Dähne; M. Hillmann; K. Wolff-Schmidt; Peter Wohlsein; Ursula Siebert

Records of marine debris in and attached to stranded harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena), harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) and grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) were studied comprising information on 6587 carcasses collected along the German coast between 1990 and 2014, the decomposition state allowed for necropsy in 1622 cases. Marine debris items were recorded in 31 carcasses including 14 entanglements (5 harbour porpoises, 6 harbour seals, 3 grey seals) and 17 cases of ingestion (4 harbour porpoises, 10 harbour seals, 3 grey seals). Objects comprised general debris (35.1%) and fishing related debris (64.9%). Injuries associated with marine debris included lesions, suppurative ulcerative dermatitis, perforation of the digestive tract, abscessation, suppurative peritonitis and septicaemia. This study is the first investigation of marine debris findings in all three marine mammal species from German waters. It demonstrates the health impacts marine debris can have, including severe suffering and death. The results provide needed information on debris burdens in the North and Baltic Seas for implementing management directives, such as the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD).


PLOS ONE | 2018

Beached bachelors: An extensive study on the largest recorded sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus mortality event in the North Sea

Lonneke L. IJsseldijk; Abbo van Neer; Rob Deaville; Lineke Begeman; Marco van de Bildt; Judith M. A. van den Brand; Andrew Brownlow; Richard Czeck; Willy Dabin; Mariel ten Doeschate; Vanessa Herder; Helena Herr; Jooske IJzer; Thierry Jauniaux; Lasse Fast Jensen; Paul D. Jepson; Wendy K. Jo; Jan Lakemeyer; Kristina Lehnert; Mardik F. Leopold; Albert D. M. E. Osterhaus; Matthew W. Perkins; Uwe Piatkowski; Ellen Prenger-Berninghoff; Ralf Pund; Peter Wohlsein; Andrea Gröne; Ursula Siebert

Between the 8th January and the 25th February 2016, the largest sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus mortality event ever recorded in the North Sea occurred with 30 sperm whales stranding in five countries within six weeks. All sperm whales were immature males. Groups were stratified by size, with the smaller animals stranding in the Netherlands, and the largest in England. The majority (n = 27) of the stranded animals were necropsied and/or sampled, allowing for an international and comprehensive investigation into this mortality event. The animals were in fair to good nutritional condition and, aside from the pathologies caused by stranding, did not exhibit significant evidence of disease or trauma. Infectious agents were found, including various parasite species, several bacterial and fungal pathogens and a novel alphaherpesvirus. In nine of the sperm whales a variety of marine litter was found. However, none of these findings were considered to have been the primary cause of the stranding event. Potential anthropogenic and environmental factors that may have caused the sperm whales to enter the North Sea were assessed. Once sperm whales enter the North Sea and head south, the water becomes progressively shallower (<40 m), making this region a global hotspot for sperm whale strandings. We conclude that the reasons for sperm whales to enter the southern North Sea are the result of complex interactions of extrinsic environmental factors. As such, these large mortality events seldom have a single ultimate cause and it is only through multidisciplinary, collaborative approaches that potentially multifactorial large-scale stranding events can be effectively investigated.


North Sea Region Climate Change Assessment | 2016

Environmental Impacts - Marine Ecosystems

Keith Brander; Geir Ottersen; Jan P. Bakker; Grégory Beaugrand; Helena Herr; Stefan Garthe; Anita Gilles; Andrew Kenny; Ursula Siebert; Hein Rune Skjoldal; Ingrid Tulp

This chapter presents a review of what is known about the impacts of climate change on the biota (plankton, benthos, fish, seabirds and marine mammals) of the North Sea. Examples show how the changing North Sea environment is affecting biological processes and organisation at all scales, including the physiology, reproduction, growth, survival, behaviour and transport of individuals; the distribution, dynamics and evolution of populations; and the trophic structure and coupling of ecosystems. These complex responses can be detected because there are detailed long-term biological and environmental records for the North Sea; written records go back 500 years and archaeological records many thousands of years. The information presented here shows that the composition and productivity of the North Sea marine ecosystem is clearly affected by climate change and that this will have consequences for sustainable levels of harvesting and other ecosystem services in the future. Multi-variate ocean climate indicators that can be used to monitor and warn of changes in composition and productivity are now being developed for the North Sea.


Biological Conservation | 2009

Spatio-temporal associations between harbour porpoise Phocoena phocoena and specific fisheries in the German Bight.

Helena Herr; Heino O. Fock; Ursula Siebert


Marine Biology | 2009

Seals at sea: modelling seal distribution in the German bight based on aerial survey data

Helena Herr; Meike Scheidat; Kristina Lehnert; Ursula Siebert


Marine Biology | 2014

Abundance of harbour porpoises (Phocoena phocoena) in the western Baltic, Belt Seas and Kattegat

Sacha Viquerat; Helena Herr; Anita Gilles; Verena Peschko; Ursula Siebert; Signe Sveegaard; Jonas Teilmann


Archive | 2017

Estimates of cetacean abundance in European Atlantic waters in summer 2016 from the SCANS-III aerial and shipboard surveys

Philip S. Hammond; C. Lacey; Anita Gilles; Sacha Viquerat; P. Boerjesson; Helena Herr; Kelly Macleod; Vincent Ridoux; M. Santos; Meike Scheidat; Jonas Teilmann; J. Vingada; N. Oeien


Archive | 2017

Studies on sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) stranded on the coast of Schleswig-Holstein, Germany in 2016.

Uwe Piatkowski; Peter Wohlsein; Abbo van Neer; Joseph Schnitzler; Anja Reckendorf; Kristina Lehnert; Jan Lakemeyer; Miguel L. Grilo; Helena Herr; Bianca Unger; Vanessa Herder; Ursula Siebert

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Abbo van Neer

University of Osnabrück

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Mardik F. Leopold

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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Rob Deaville

Zoological Society of London

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