Quantifying uncertainty in anthropogenic causes of injury and mortality for an endangered baleen whale

IF 2.7 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Ecosphere Pub Date : 2024-12-18 DOI:10.1002/ecs2.70086
Daniel W. Linden, Jeffrey A. Hostetler, Richard M. Pace III, Lance P. Garrison, Amy R. Knowlton, Véronique Lesage, Rob Williams, Michael C. Runge
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Abstract

Understanding the causes of mortality for a declining species is essential for developing effective conservation and management strategies, particularly when anthropogenic activities are the primary threat. Using a competing hazards framework allows for robust estimation of the cause-specific variation in risk that may exist across multiple dimensions, such as time and individual. Here, we estimated cause-specific rates of severe injury and mortality for North Atlantic right whales (Eubalaena glacialis), a critically endangered species that is currently in peril due to human-caused interactions. We developed a multistate capture–recapture model that leveraged 30 years of intensive survey effort yielding sightings of individuals with injury assessments and necropsies of carcass recoveries. We examined variation in the hazard rates of severe injury and mortality due to entanglements in fishing gear and vessel strikes as explained by temporal patterns and the age and reproductive status of the individual. We found strong evidence for increased rates of severe entanglement injuries after 2013 and for females with calves, with consequently higher marginal mortality. The model results also suggested that despite vessel strikes causing a lower average rate of severe injuries, the higher mortality rate conditional on injury results in significant total mortality risk, particularly for females resting from a recent calving event. Large uncertainty in the estimation of carcass recovery rate for vessel strike deaths permeated into the apportionment of mortality causes. The increased rates of North Atlantic right whale mortality in the last decade, particularly for reproducing females, has been responsible for the severe decline in the species. By apportioning the human-caused threats using a quantitative approach with estimation of relevant uncertainty, this work can guide development of conservation and management strategies to facilitate species recovery. Our approach is relevant to other monitored populations where cause-specific injuries from multiple threats can be observed in live and dead individuals.

Abstract Image

量化濒危须鲸受伤和死亡的人为原因的不确定性
了解濒危物种的死亡原因对于制定有效的保护和管理策略至关重要,特别是当人为活动是主要威胁时。使用竞争危险框架可以对可能存在于多个维度(如时间和个人)的风险的特定原因变化进行可靠的估计。在这里,我们估计了北大西洋露脊鲸(Eubalaena glacialis)的严重伤害和死亡率,这是一种极度濒危的物种,目前由于人类造成的相互作用而处于危险之中。我们开发了一个多州捕获-再捕获模型,该模型利用了30年的密集调查工作,产生了带有损伤评估和尸体恢复尸检的个体目击。我们检查了因渔具缠绕和船只撞击造成的严重伤害和死亡率的危险率的变化,这是由时间模式、个体的年龄和生殖状态所解释的。我们发现了强有力的证据,表明2013年之后严重缠结伤害的发生率增加,有幼崽的雌性也增加了,因此边际死亡率更高。模型结果还表明,尽管血管撞击造成的平均严重伤害率较低,但以伤害为条件的较高死亡率导致了显著的总死亡风险,特别是对于最近产犊事件后休息的雌性。船舶撞击死亡的尸体回收率估计存在很大的不确定性,这种不确定性渗透到死亡原因的分配中。北大西洋露脊鲸的死亡率在过去十年中不断上升,尤其是正在繁殖的雌性露脊鲸,这是导致该物种严重减少的原因。利用定量方法对人类活动造成的威胁进行评估,并对相关不确定性进行估计,从而指导保护和管理策略的制定,促进物种的恢复。我们的方法与其他监测人群相关,在这些人群中,可以在活的和死的个体中观察到多种威胁造成的特定原因的伤害。
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来源期刊
Ecosphere
Ecosphere ECOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
3.70%
发文量
378
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: The scope of Ecosphere is as broad as the science of ecology itself. The journal welcomes submissions from all sub-disciplines of ecological science, as well as interdisciplinary studies relating to ecology. The journal''s goal is to provide a rapid-publication, online-only, open-access alternative to ESA''s other journals, while maintaining the rigorous standards of peer review for which ESA publications are renowned.
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