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An integrated approach to historical population assessment of the great whales: case of the New Zealand southern right whale

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Title An integrated approach to historical population assessment of the great whales: case of the New Zealand southern right whale
Names Jackson, Jennifer A. (creator)
Carroll, Emma L. (creator)
Smith, Tim D. (creator)
Zerbini, Alexandre N. (creator)
Patenaude, Nathalie J. (creator)
Baker, C. Scott (creator)
Date Issued 2016-03 (iso8601)
Note This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the author(s) and published by The Royal Society. The published article can be found at: http://rsos.royalsocietypublishing.org/
Abstract Accurate estimation of historical abundance provides an
essential baseline for judging the recovery of the great whales.
This is particularly challenging for whales hunted prior to
twentieth century modern whaling, as population-level catch
records are often incomplete. Assessments of whale recovery
using pre-modern exploitation indices are therefore rare,
despite the intensive, global nature of nineteenth century
whaling. Right whales (Eubalaena spp.) were particularly
exploited: slow swimmers with strong fidelity to sheltered
calving bays, the species made predictable and easy targets.
Here, we present the first integrated population-level
assessment of the whaling impact and pre-exploitation
abundance of a right whale, the New Zealand southern right whale (E. australis). In this assessment, we use a Bayesian population dynamics model
integrating multiple data sources: nineteenth century catches, genetic constraints on bottleneck
size and individual sightings histories informing abundance and trend. Different catch allocation
scenarios are explored to account for uncertainty in the population’s offshore distribution. From
a pre-exploitation abundance of 28 800–47 100 whales, nineteenth century hunting reduced the
population to approximately 30–40 mature females between 1914 and 1926. Today, it stands at less
than 12% of pre-exploitation abundance. Despite the challenges of reconstructing historical catches
and population boundaries, conservation efforts of historically exploited species benefit from targets
for ecological restoration.
Genre Article
Access Condition http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/us/
Topic whaling
Identifier Jackson, J. A., Carroll, E. L., Smith, T. D., Zerbini, A. N., Patenaude, N. J., & Baker, C. S. (2016). An integrated approach to historical population assessment of the great whales: case of the New Zealand southern right whale. Royal Society Open Science, 3(3), 150669. doi:10.1098/rsos.150669

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