S.M.J.M. Brasseur
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Featured researches published by S.M.J.M. Brasseur.
Current Biology | 2014
Deborah Jill Fraser Russell; S.M.J.M. Brasseur; David Thompson; Gordon D. Hastie; Vincent M. Janik; Geert Aarts; Brett T. McClintock; Jason Matthiopoulos; Simon Moss; Bernie J. McConnell
On land, species from all trophic levels have adapted to fill vacant niches in environments heavily modified by humans (e.g. [1]). In the marine environment, ocean infrastructure has led to artificial reefs, resulting in localized increases in fish and crustacean density [2]. Whether marine apex predators exhibit behavioural adaptations to utilise such a scattered potential resource is unknown. Using high resolution GPS data we show how infrastructure, including wind turbines and pipelines, shapes the movements of individuals from two seal species (Phoca vitulina and Halichoerus grypus). Using state-space models, we infer that these animals are using structures to forage. We highlight the ecological consequences of such behaviour, at a time of unprecedented developments in marine infrastructure.
Biology Letters | 2010
Peter J.H. Reijnders; S.M.J.M. Brasseur; Erik Meesters
The annual reproductive cycle of most seal species is characterized by a tight synchrony of births. Typically, timing of birth shows little inter-annual variation. Here, however we show that harbour seals Phoca vitulina from the Wadden Sea (southeast North Sea) have shortened their yearly cycle, moving parturition to earlier dates since the early 1970s. Between 1974 and 2009, the birth date of harbour seals shifted on average by −0.71 d yr−1, three and a half weeks (25 days) earlier, in the Dutch part of the Wadden Sea. Pup counts available for other parts of the Wadden Sea were analysed, showing a similar shift. To elucidate potential mechanism(s) for this shift in pupping phenology, possible changes in population demography, changes in maternal life-history traits and variations in environmental conditions were examined. It was deduced that the most likely mechanism was a shortening of embryonic diapause. We hypothesize that this could have been facilitated by an improved forage base, e.g. increase of small fishes, attributable to overfishing of large predator fishes and size-selective fisheries.
PLOS ONE | 2018
S.M.J.M. Brasseur; Peter J.H. Reijnders; Jenny Cremer; Erik Meesters; Roger Kirkwood; Lasse Fast Jensen; Armin Jeβ; Anders Galatius; Jonas Teilmann; Geert Aarts
Terrestrial and marine wildlife populations have been severely reduced by hunting, fishing and habitat destruction, especially in the last centuries. Although management regulations have led to the recovery of some populations, the underlying processes are not always well understood. This study uses a 40-year time series of counts of harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) in the Wadden Sea to study these processes, and demonstrates the influence of historical regional differences in management regimes on the recovery of this population. While the Wadden Sea is considered one ecologically coupled zone, with a distinct harbour seal population, the area is divided into four geo-political regions i.e. the Netherlands, Lower Saxony including Hamburg, Schleswig-Holstein and Denmark. Gradually, seal hunting was banned between 1962 and 1977 in the different regions. Counts of moulting harbour seals and pup counts, obtained during aerial surveys between 1974 and 2014, show a population growth from approximately 4500 to 39,000 individuals. Population growth models were developed to assess if population growth differed between regions, taking into account two Phocine Distemper Virus (PDV) epizootics, in 1988 and 2002 which seriously affected the population. After a slow start prior to the first epizootic, the overall population grew exponentially at rates close to assumed maximum rates of increase in a harbour seal population. Recently, growth slowed down, potentially indicative of approaching carrying capacity. Regional differences in growth rates were demonstrated, with the highest recovery in Netherlands after the first PDV epizootic (i.e. 17.9%), suggesting that growth was fuelled by migration from the other regions, where growth remained at or below the intrinsic growth rate (13%). The seals’ distribution changed, and although the proportion of seals counted in the German regions declined, they remained by far the most important pupping region, with approximately 70% of all pups being born there. It is hypothesised that differences in hunting regime, preceding the protection in the 1960’s and 1970’s, created unbalance in the distribution of breeding females throughout the Wadden Sea, which prevailed for decades. Breeding site fidelity promoted the growth in pup numbers at less affected breeding sites, while recolonisation of new breeding areas would be suppressed by the philopatry displayed by the animals born there. This study shows that for long-lived species, variable management regimes in this case hunting regulations, across a species’ range can drive population dynamics for several generations.
Archive | 1997
Peter J.H. Reijnders; G. Verriopoulos; S.M.J.M. Brasseur
International Journal of Obesity | 2004
J.A.M. Janssen; J.H.J. Schaminée; S.M.J.M. Brasseur; F.G.W.A. Ottburg; A.H.P. Stumpel; A.H. Hoffmann
Archive | 2014
Geert Aarts; Esther Lane Jones; S.M.J.M. Brasseur; A. Rindorf; Sophie Smout; M. Dickey-Collas; P. Wright; Deborah Jill Fraser Russell; Bernie J. McConnell; R.J. Kirkwood; Michael A. Fedak; Jason Matthiopoulos; P.J.H. Reijnders
Wadden Sea Newsletter 1996-1: 31-32 | 1996
Peter J.H. Reijnders; E. H. Ries; S.M.J.M. Brasseur
PLOS ONE | 2018
S.M.J.M. Brasseur; Peter J.H. Reijnders; Jenny Cremer; Erik Meesters; Roger Kirkwood; Lasse Fast Jensen; Armin Jeβ; Anders Galatius; Jonas Teilmann; Geert Aarts
De Levende Natuur | 2016
A.V. de Groot; S.M.J.M. Brasseur; Geert Aarts; E.M. Dijkman; Roger Kirkwood
Archive | 2015
S.M.J.M. Brasseur; A.V. de Groot; Geert Aarts; E.M. Dijkman; Roger Kirkwood