Volume 5, Issue 3 (10-2023)                   JAD 2023, 5(3): 1-18 | Back to browse issues page


XML Print


Download citation:
BibTeX | RIS | EndNote | Medlars | ProCite | Reference Manager | RefWorks
Send citation to:

Mbungu Ndamba S, Maba Ngaka A, Nzinga S, Sambu Banganga J, Lai H, Van Waerebeek K. Cetaceans of the Congo River Estuary, DRC: the first inventory, aided by citizen science. JAD 2023; 5 (3) :1-18
URL: http://jad.lu.ac.ir/article-1-403-en.html
1- l'Institut Supérieur de Navigation et de Pêche (ISNP), Muanda, Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC); Centre d’Initiatives pour la Conservation de la Biodiversité (CICOBIO), Avenue Lelo Luemba N°10, Q. Ocean, Muanda, DRC , sammbungu@gmail.com
2- Service National de l'Aquaculture à Nsiamfumu, DRC
3- Équipe d’observateurs des Cétacés, CICOBIO, Avenue Lelo Luemba N°10, Q. Ocean, Muanda, DRC
4- Agence de Pêche Artisanal (Artisanal Fisheries Agency), Nsiamfumu, DRC
5- Eco Institute, Favor Industrial Centre, 2-6 Kin Hong Street, Kwai Chung, N.T., Hong Kong
6- Peruvian Centre for Cetacean Research/Centro Peruano de Estudios Cetológicos (CEPEC), Museo de Delfines, Pucusana, Lima-20, Peru; Conservation and Research of West African Aquatic Mammals (COREWAM), c/o Faculty of Environment and Conservation, University College of Agriculture and Environmental Studies, P.O. Box 25, Bunso, Eastern Region, Ghana
Abstract:   (4222 Views)
The first inventory of cetacean diversity in coastal waters of the Congo River Estuary, Democratic Republic of the Congo, was obtained between May 2021 and April 2022, through incidental sightings (n=17) reported mainly by artisanal fishers and direct observations of bycatches at fish landing sites. Confirmed records include five odontocete species: four Delphinidae: Delphinus capensis Gray, Pseudorca crassidens (Owen), Stenella frontalis (G. Cuvier), Tursiops truncatus (Montagu); one Kogiidae: Kogia sima (Owen). There was one mysticete, Balaenopteridae: Megaptera novaeangliae (Borowski). Of six small cetaceans documented landed for use as aquatic bushmeat, four (66.7%) were T. truncatus. Megaptera novaeangliae was the most frequently sighted cetacean (47.1% of reported sightings), registered between 17 May3 September 2021, with a seasonality (austral winter) consistent with the SE Atlantic breeding stock (‘B-Stock’). All information was collected by locals, the at-sea sightings by trained fishermen in a citizen science framework. The main benefits included a welcome marine conservation educational component, and low-cost, opportunistic fishing boat use. Shortfalls comprised a deficiency in scientific detail and effort quantification, occasional data loss and lack of biological sampling. However, in a remote coastal region like the DRC’s Congo River estuary, where marine mammals have never before been studied, local citizen science methodology proved effective and, after adjustments, should be scaled-up.
Full-Text [PDF 1434 kb]   (1003 Downloads)    
Type of Study: Original Research Article | Subject: Species Diversity
Received: 2023/08/16 | Accepted: 2023/10/30 | Published: 2023/11/15

References
1. Ayissi, I., Van Waerebeek, K. and Segniagbeto, G. (2011). Report on the Exploratory survey of cetaceans and their status in Cameroon. Document UNEP/CMS/ScC17/Inf.10. Presented to 17th Meeting of CMS/UNEP Scientific Council, Bergen, 17-18 November 2011. http://www.cms.int/sites/default/files/document/Inf_10_Rpt_Cameroon_cetaceans_exploratory_survey_Eonly_0.pdf
2. Bamy, I. L., Van Waerebeek, K., Bah, S. S., Dia, M., Kaba, B., Keita, N. and Konate, S. (2010). Species occurrence of cetaceans in Guinea, including humpback whales with southern hemisphere seasonality. Marine Biodiversity Records, 3 (e48): 1-10. [DOI:10.1017/S1755267210000436]
3. Bamy, I., Djiba, A. and Van Waerebeek, K. (2021). Recent Survey for Delphinids at Tristao Islands, Guinea, Reinforces Concern for Bycatches and Marine Bushmeat Use. Preprints 2021040094. [DOI:10.20944/preprints202104.0094.v1]
4. Best P. B. (1967). The sperm whale (Physeter catodon) off the West coast of South Africa. 1. Ovarian changes and their significance. Investigational Report, Division of Sea Fisheries of South Africa, 61: 1-27.
5. Best P. B. (1969). The sperm whale (Physeter catodon) off the West coast of South Africa. 4. Distribution and movements. Investigational Report, Division of Sea Fisheries of South Africa, 78: 1-12.
6. Best P. B. (1970). The sperm whale (Physeter catodon) off the West coast of South Africa. 5. Age, growth and mortality. Investigational Report, Division of Sea Fisheries of South Africa, 61: 1-27.
7. Best, P. B. (2007). Whales and Dolphins of the Southern African Subregion. Cambridge University Press, Cape Town, South Africa. 338 pp.
8. Carwardine, M. (2020). Handbook of whales, dolphins and porpoises. Bloomsbury Wildlife, London. 528 pp.
9. Castro, C., García-Cegarra, A. M., Uceda-Vega, P., Aguilar, L., Kelez, S., Buchan S. J., and Van Waerebeek, K. (2023). First documented records of Southern right whale (Eubalaena australis) of the Chile-Peru population: first observations in Ecuador and north of Peru. Document SC/69A/CMP/25, International Whaling Commission Scientific Committee, Bled, Slovenia.
10. Collins, T., Braulik, G.T. and Perrin, W. (2017). Sousa teuszii (errata version published in 2018). The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017: e.T20425A123792572.
11. Collins, T., Strindberg, S., Boumba Dilambaka, E. R., Thonio, J., Mouissou, C., Boukaka, R., Saffou, G. K., Buckland, L., Leeney, R., Antunes, R. and Rosenbaum, H. C. (2013). Progress on Atlantic humpback dolphin conservation and research efforts in Congo and Gabon. Document SC/65a/SM16rev, International Whaling Commission, Scientific Committee. 24pp. [Available from the IWC Secretariat, Cambridge, UK].
12. Collins, T., Van Waerebeek, K., Carvalho, I., Boumba, R., Dilambaka, E., Mouissou, E., Thonio, J., Minton, G., Kema Kema, R., Mbungu Ndamba, S., Musgrave, R., Ngouessono, S. and Rosenbaum, H. (2019). An assessment of cetacean bycatches, strandings and other mortalities from Central Africa, including evidence of use by people. Document SC/68A/SM/05, International Whaling Commission Scientific Committee Meeting, Nairobi, May 2019. 12 pp. [Available from the IWC Secretariat, Cambridge, UK].
13. Cunha, H. A., de Castro, R. L., Secchi, E. R., Crespo, E. A., Lailson-Brito, J., Azevedo, A. F., Lazoski, C. and Solé-Cava, A. M. (2015). Molecular and morphological differentiation of Common Dolphins (Delphinus sp.) in the Southwestern Atlantic: testing the two species hypothesis in sympatry. PLoS ONE, 2015; 10 (11): e0140251. [DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0140251] [PMID] []
14. Dickman, K. (2009). Evolution in the Deepest River in the World. Science and Nature. Smithsonian Magazine, Issue 2009-11-03.
15. Djiba, A., Bamy, I. L., Samba Ould Bilal, A., and Van Waerebeek, K. (2015) Biodiversity of cetaceans in coastal waters of Northwest Africa: new insights through platform-of-opportunity visual surveying in 2011-2013. pp. 283-297 In: L. Valdés and I. Déniz-González (eds.). Oceanographic and Biological Features in the Canary Current Large Marine Ecosystem. IOC-UNESCO, Paris. IOC Technical Series 115:
16. Findlay, K. P., Best, P. B., Ross, G. J. B. and Cockroft, V. G. (1992). The distribution of small odontocete cetaceans off the coasts of South Africa and Namibia. South African Journal of Marine Science, 12: 237-270. [DOI:10.2989/02577619209504706]
17. García-Cegarra, A. M., Toro, F. and Gonzalez-Borasca, V. (2021). Citizen science as a tool to assess cetacean diversity in the Atacama Desert coast. Ocean and Coastal Management, 213: 105858. [DOI:10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2021.105858]
18. Gray, J.E. (1828). Spicilegia Zoologica; or original figures and short systematic descriptions of new and unfigured animals. Treüttel, Würtz and Co., London. 30 pp.
19. Heyning, J.E. and Perrin, W.F. (1994). Evidence for two species of common dolphins (Genus Delphinus) from the eastern North Pacific. Contributions in Science, 442: 1-35. [DOI:10.5962/p.226804]
20. Ingram, D. J., Prideaux, M., Hodgins, N. K., Frisch-Nwakanma, H., Avila, I. C., Collins, T., Cosentino, M., Keith-Diagne, L. W., Marsh, H., Shirley, M. H., Van Waerebeek, K., Djondo, M. K., Fukuda, Y., Glaus K. B. J., Jabado, R. W., Lang, J. W., Lüber, S., Manolis, C., Webb, G. J. W. and Porter, L. (2022). Widespread Use of Migratory Megafauna for Aquatic Wild Meat in the Tropics and Subtropics. Frontiers in Marine Science, 9: 837447. [DOI:10.3389/fmars.2022.837447]
21. Jefferson, T. A. and Van Waerebeek, K. (2002). The taxonomic status of the nominal dolphin species Delphinus tropicalis van Bree, 1971. Marine Mammal Science, 18 (4): 787-818. [DOI:10.1111/j.1748-7692.2002.tb01074.x]
22. Kiani, M. S., Nawaz, R., Moazzam, M., Shafiq, B. and Van Waerebeek, K. (2021) Longman's Beaked Whale Indopacetus pacificus and Mesoplodon spp. entanglements off Pakistan: Are Pelagic Gillnet Fisheries a Potential Threat? Preprints 2021, 2021100051. [DOI:10.20944/preprints202110.0051.v1]
23. Kükenthal, W. (1892). Sotalia teuszii n. sp. ein pflanzenfressender (?) Delphin aus Kamerun. Zoologische Jahrbücher Abt. Systematick, 6 (3): 442-446.
24. Mbungu Ndamba, S. (2022). Contribution à l'étude des dauphins fréquentant le littoral de la RDC. Rapport d'Activité N° 1 couvrant la période allant du 1 Novembre 2021 au 15 avril 2022. Unpublished report CICOBIO, Muanda, Democratic Republic of the Congo. 19 pp. [In French].
25. Morais, M. (2012). Marine mammal sightings off the Angolan coast recorded from the R/V Dr. Fridtjof Nansen in August 2004 and July 2005. pp. 26-30. In: K. Van Waerebeek (ed.). Conserving cetaceans and manatees in the western African Region. CMS Technical Series, No. 26. CMS Secretariat, Bonn, Germany. https://www.cms.int/aquatic-mammals/en/publica tion/conserving-cetaceans-and-manatees-western-african-region-ts-no-26
26. Mwango'mbe, M., Spilsbury, J., Trott, S., Nyunja, J., Nina, W., Collins, T., Gomes, I. and Pérez-Jorge, S. (2021). Cetacean Research and Citizen Science in Kenya. Frontiers in Marine Science, 8: 642399. [DOI:10.3389/fmars.2021.642399]
27. Ngqulana, S.G., Plön, S., Galatius, A., Pistorius, P. and Hofmeyr, G. J. G. (2019). Cranial variation in common dolphins Delphinus spp. off South Africa, with the inclusion of information from the holotype of Delphinus capensis. African Journal of Marine Science, 41 (3): 247-260. [DOI:10.2989/1814232X.2019.1648318]
28. Ofori-Danson, P.K., Van Waerebeek, K. and Debrah, S. (2003). A survey for the conservation of dolphins in Ghanaian coastal waters. Journal of the Ghana Science Association, 5 (2): 45-54.
29. Perrin, W. F. (2018). Common Dolphin Delphinus delphis. pp. 205-209. In: (eds. B. Würsig, J.G.M. Thewissen, K.M. Kovacs). Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals. Third Edition, Academic Press. [DOI:10.1016/B978-0-12-804327-1.00095-9]
30. Perrin, W. F. and Van Waerebeek, K. (2012). The Small-Cetacean Fauna of the West Coast of Africa and Macaronesia: diversity and distribution. pp. 7-17. In: K. Van Waerebeek (ed.). Conserving cetaceans and manatees in the western African Region. CMS Technical Series 26, UNEP/CMS, Bonn, Germany. https://www.cms.int/aquatic-mammals/en/public ation/conserving-cetaceans-and-manatees-western -african-region-ts-no-26.
31. Robineau, D. and Vely, M. (1997). Données préliminaires (taille corporelle, craniométrie) sur le grand dauphin (Tursiops truncatus) des côtes d'Afrique du nord-ouest (Mauritanie, Sénégal). Mammalia, 61 (3): 443-448. [DOI:10.1515/mammalia-1997-610310]
32. Rosenbaum, H. C., Pomilla C., Mendez, M., Leslie, M. S., Best, P. B., Findlay, K. P., Minton, G., Ersts, P. J., Collins, T., Engel, M. H., Bonatto, S. L., Kotze, D. P .G. H., Meÿer, M., Barendse, J., Thornton, M., Razafindrakoto, Y., Ngouessono, S., Vély, M. and Kiszka, J. (2009). Population structure of humpback whales from their breeding grounds in the South Atlantic and Indian Oceans. PLoS ONE, 4: 1-11. [DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0007318] [PMID] []
33. Rosenbaum, H., Maxwell, S., Kershaw, F. and Mate, B. (2014) Long-range movement of humpback whales and their overlap with anthropogenic activity in the South Atlantic Ocean. Conservation Biology, 28: 604-615. [DOI:10.1111/cobi.12225] [PMID]
34. Samaai, T., Best, P.B., Gibbons, M. J. (2005). The taxonomic status of common dolphins Delphinus spp. in South African waters. African Journal of Marine Science, 27: 449-458. [DOI:10.2989/18142320509504103]
35. Samba Bilal, A., Wagne, M. M., Wagué, A., Dia, A. and Van Waerebeek, K. (2023). The Cetaceans of Mauritania, West Africa: a concise zoogeographical review with two new species records. Journal of Animal Diversity, 5 (1): 1-35.
36. Savoye, B., Babonneau, N., Dennielou, B. and Bez, M. (2009). Geological overview of the Angola-Congo margin, the Congo deep-sea fan and its submarine valleys. Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography, 56: 2169-2182. [DOI:10.1016/j.dsr2.2009.04.001]
37. Segniagbeto, G. H., Ayissi, I., Bamy, I. L., Debrah, J., Djiba, A., Dossou-Bodjrenou, J., Ofori-Danson, P. K., Samba Ould Bilal, A., Sohou, Z., Tchibozo, S., Uwagbae, M. and Van Waerebeek, K. (2019). On the utilisation of by-caught, hunted and stranded cetaceans in West Africa. Document SC/May19/AAWW/04, International Whaling Commission Scientific Committee, Nairobi, May 2019. 14pp. Available from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/334249267
38. Segniagbeto, G. H., Van Waerebeek, K., Bowessidjaou, E. J., Ketoh, K., Kpatcha, T. K., Okoumassou, K. and Ahoedo, K. (2012). Annotated checklist and fisheries interactions of cetaceans in Togo, with evidence of Antarctic minke whale in the Gulf of Guinea. Integrative Zoology, 9 (1): 378-390. [DOI:10.1111/1749-4877.12011] [PMID]
39. Sohou, Z., Dossou-Bodjrenou, J., Tchibozo, S., Chabi-Yaouré, F., Sinsin, B. and Van Waerebeek K. (2013). Biodiversity and Status of Cetaceans in Benin, West Africa: an Initial Assessment. West African Journal of Applied Ecology, 21 (1): 121-134.
40. Talling, P., Baker, M., Pope, E., Ruffell, S., Silva J. R., Heijnen, M., Hage, S., Simmons, S., Hasenhündl, M., Heerema, K., McGhee, C., Apprioual, R., Ferrant, A., Cartigny, M., Parsons, D., Clare, M., Tshimanga, R., Trigg, M., Cula, C. and Hilton, R. (2022). Longest sediment flows yet measured show how major rivers connect efficiently to deep sea. Nature Communications, 13: 4193. [DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-31689-3] [PMID] []
41. Tollab, M. A., Rezaie-Atagholipour, M., Ali Abedi, H., Askari Hesni, M., Abedi, E., Ahmadi, F. and Van Waerebeek, K. (2023). After two decades: extremely rare records of dugongs, Dugong dugon (Sirenia: Dugongidae), in the Iranian Persian Gulf. Journal of Animal Diversity, 5 (1): 108-112.
42. Townsend, C. H. (1935). The distribution of certain whales as shown by logbook records of American whaleships. Zoologica (NY), 19 (1-2): 1-50. [DOI:10.5962/p.203715]
43. UNEP/CMS (2012). Conserving cetaceans and manatees in the western African region. (ed. K. Van Waerebeek). CMS Technical Series, 26. Bonn, Germany. 88 pp.
44. Uwagbae, M. and Van Waerebeek, K. (2010). Initial evidence of dolphin takes in the Niger Delta region and a review of Nigerian cetaceans. IWC Scientific Committee Document SC/62/SM1, International Whaling Commission, June 2010, Agadir, Morocco. 8 pp.
45. Van Waerebeek K., Bamy I.L., Jiddou A.M., Sequeira M., Diop M., Ofori-Danson P.K., Tchibozo S. and Campredon P. (2008). Indeterminate status of West African populations of inshore common bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus cautions against opportunistic live-capture schemes. Technical Report to the Fondation Internationale du Banc d'Arguin (FIBA). 9 pp.
46. Van Waerebeek K., Ofori-Danson P.K. and Debrah J. (2009). The cetaceans of Ghana: a validated faunal checklist. West African Journal of Applied Ecology, 15: 61-90. [DOI:10.4314/wajae.v15i1.49428]
47. Van Waerebeek K., Reyes J.C. and Van Bressem M.F. (1994). Presencia de dos especies de Delphinus en el Pacífico sureste. pp. 78-79. In: A. Ximenez and P.C. Simoes-Lopes (eds.) Anais 6a RT Especialistas em Mamíferos Aquáticos da América do Sul. Universidade de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Brasil. [In Spanish].
48. Van Waerebeek, K. (1997). Long-beaked and short-beaked common dolphins sympatric off central-west Africa. Document SC/49/SM46, International Whaling Commission Scientific Committee, September 1997, Bournemouth, UK, 5pp. Available from https://www.researchgate.net/publication/257931862
49. Van Waerebeek, K. and De Smet, W.M.A. (1996) A second record of the false killer whale Pseudorca crassidens (Owen, 1846) (Cetacea, Delphinidae) from West Africa. Mammalia, 60 (2): 319-322.
50. Van Waerebeek, K., Barnett, L., Camara, A., Cham, A., Diallo, M., Djiba, A., Jallow, A. O., Ndiaye, E., Bilal, A. O. and Bamy, I. L. (2004). Distribution, status, and biology of the Atlantic humpback dolphin, Sousa teuszii (Kükenthal, 1892). Aquatic Mammals, 30 (1): 56-83. [DOI:10.1578/AM.30.1.2004.56]
51. Van Waerebeek, K., Djiba, A., Krakstad, J.-O., Samba Ould Bilal, A., Almeida, A. and Mass Mbye, E. (2013) New evidence for a South Atlantic stock of humpback whales wintering on the Northwest African continental shelf. African Zoology, 48 (1): 177-186. [DOI:10.3377/004.048.0120]
52. Van Waerebeek, K., Ofori-Danson, P. K., Debrah, J., Collins, T., Djiba, A., Samba Ould Bilal, A. (2016). On the status of the common bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus in western Africa, with emphasis on fisheries interactions, 1947-2015. Document SC/66b/SM19, International Whaling Commission Scientific Committee, Bled, Slovenia, June 2016. 19 pp.
53. Van Waerebeek, K., Tchibozo, S., Montcho, J., Nobime, G., Sohou, Z., Sohouhoue, P. and Dossou, C. (2001). The Bight of Benin, a North Atlantic breeding ground of a Southern Hemisphere humpback whale population, likely related to Gabon and Angola substocks. Document SC/53/IA21, International Whaling Commission Scientific Committee, July 2001, London. 8 pp.
54. Van Waerebeek, K., van Bree, P. J. H. and Best, P. B. (1995). On the identity of Prodelphinus Petersii Lütken, 1889 and records of dusky dolphins Lagenorhynchus obscurus (Gray, 1828) from the Indian and southern mid-Atlantic Oceans. South African Journal of Marine Science, 16: 25-35. [DOI:10.2989/025776195784156584]
55. Weir, C. R. (2006). First confirmed records of Clymene dolphin Stenella clymene (Gray, 1850) from Angola and Congo, south-east Atlantic Ocean. African Zoology, 41 (2): 297-300. [DOI:10.1080/15627020.2006.11407366]
56. Weir, C. R. (2007). The distribution and seasonal occurrence of cetaceans off northern Angola, 2004-05. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, 9 (3): 225-239. [DOI:10.47536/jcrm.v9i3.671]
57. Weir, C. R. (2010). A Review of Cetacean Occurrence in West African Waters from the Gulf of Guinea to Angola. Mammal Review, 40: 2-39. [DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2907.2009.00153.x]
58. Weir, C., Van Waerebeek, K., Jefferson, T. A. and Collins, T. (2011). West Africa's Atlantic humpback dolphin: endemic, enigmatic and soon endangered? African Zoology, 46 (1): 1-17. [DOI:10.1080/15627020.2011.11407473]
59. Whitt, A. D., Warde, A. M., Blair, L., Deslarzes, K. J. P. and Chaineau, C.-H. (2023). Recent occurrence of marine mammals and seaturtles off Angola and first report of right whales since the whaling era. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom, 103, e9: 1-9. [DOI:10.1017/S0025315422001084]

Add your comments about this article : Your username or Email:
CAPTCHA

Send email to the article author


Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

  | Journal of Animal Diversity

Designed & Developed by : Yektaweb