A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale
The North Atlantic right whale (NARW) (Eubalaena glacialis) is one of the world's most threatened whales. It came close to extinction after nearly a millennium of exploitation and currently persists as a population of only approximately 500 individuals. Setting appropriate conservation targets...
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ftird:oai:ird.fr:fdi:010067706 2024-09-15T18:05:10+00:00 A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale /Monsarrat, Sophie Pennino, M. G. Smith, T. D. Reeves, R. R. Meynard, C. N. Kaplan, D. Rodrigues, A. S. L. ATLANTIQUE NORD 2016 https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010067706 EN eng https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010067706 oai:ird.fr:fdi:010067706 Monsarrat Sophie, Pennino M. G., Smith T. D., Reeves R. R., Meynard C. N., Kaplan D., Rodrigues A. S. L. A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale. 2016, 30 (4), p. 783-791 Eubalaena feeding grounds generalized additive modeling historical baseline population size whaling areas de alimentacion caza de ballenas linea base historica modelado aditivo generalizado tamano de poblacion text 2016 ftird 2024-08-15T05:57:41Z The North Atlantic right whale (NARW) (Eubalaena glacialis) is one of the world's most threatened whales. It came close to extinction after nearly a millennium of exploitation and currently persists as a population of only approximately 500 individuals. Setting appropriate conservation targets for this species requires an understanding of its historical population size, as a baseline for measuring levels of depletion and progress toward recovery. This is made difficult by the scarcity of records over this species' long whaling history. We sought to estimate the preexploitation population size of the North Atlantic right whale and understand how this species was distributed across its range. We used a spatially explicit data set on historical catches of North Pacific right whales (NPRWs) (Eubalaena japonica) to model the relationship between right whale relative density and the environment during the summer feeding season. Assuming the 2 right whale species select similar environments, we projected this model to the North Atlantic to predict how the relative abundance of NARWs varied across their range. We calibrated these relative abundances with estimates of the NPRW total prewhaling population size to obtain high and low estimates for the overall NARW population size prior to exploitation. The model predicted 9,075-21,328 right whales in the North Atlantic. The current NARW population is thus <6% of the historical North Atlantic carrying capacity and has enormous potential for recovery. According to the model, in June-September NARWs concentrated in 2 main feeding areas: east of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland and in the Norwegian Sea. These 2 areas may become important in the future as feeding grounds and may already be used more regularly by this endangered species than is thought. Text Eubalaena glacialis Eubalaena japonica Newfoundland North Atlantic North Atlantic right whale Norwegian Sea IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
IRD (Institute de recherche pour le développement): Horizon |
op_collection_id |
ftird |
language |
English |
topic |
Eubalaena feeding grounds generalized additive modeling historical baseline population size whaling areas de alimentacion caza de ballenas linea base historica modelado aditivo generalizado tamano de poblacion |
spellingShingle |
Eubalaena feeding grounds generalized additive modeling historical baseline population size whaling areas de alimentacion caza de ballenas linea base historica modelado aditivo generalizado tamano de poblacion /Monsarrat, Sophie Pennino, M. G. Smith, T. D. Reeves, R. R. Meynard, C. N. Kaplan, D. Rodrigues, A. S. L. A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale |
topic_facet |
Eubalaena feeding grounds generalized additive modeling historical baseline population size whaling areas de alimentacion caza de ballenas linea base historica modelado aditivo generalizado tamano de poblacion |
description |
The North Atlantic right whale (NARW) (Eubalaena glacialis) is one of the world's most threatened whales. It came close to extinction after nearly a millennium of exploitation and currently persists as a population of only approximately 500 individuals. Setting appropriate conservation targets for this species requires an understanding of its historical population size, as a baseline for measuring levels of depletion and progress toward recovery. This is made difficult by the scarcity of records over this species' long whaling history. We sought to estimate the preexploitation population size of the North Atlantic right whale and understand how this species was distributed across its range. We used a spatially explicit data set on historical catches of North Pacific right whales (NPRWs) (Eubalaena japonica) to model the relationship between right whale relative density and the environment during the summer feeding season. Assuming the 2 right whale species select similar environments, we projected this model to the North Atlantic to predict how the relative abundance of NARWs varied across their range. We calibrated these relative abundances with estimates of the NPRW total prewhaling population size to obtain high and low estimates for the overall NARW population size prior to exploitation. The model predicted 9,075-21,328 right whales in the North Atlantic. The current NARW population is thus <6% of the historical North Atlantic carrying capacity and has enormous potential for recovery. According to the model, in June-September NARWs concentrated in 2 main feeding areas: east of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland and in the Norwegian Sea. These 2 areas may become important in the future as feeding grounds and may already be used more regularly by this endangered species than is thought. |
format |
Text |
author |
/Monsarrat, Sophie Pennino, M. G. Smith, T. D. Reeves, R. R. Meynard, C. N. Kaplan, D. Rodrigues, A. S. L. |
author_facet |
/Monsarrat, Sophie Pennino, M. G. Smith, T. D. Reeves, R. R. Meynard, C. N. Kaplan, D. Rodrigues, A. S. L. |
author_sort |
/Monsarrat, Sophie |
title |
A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale |
title_short |
A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale |
title_full |
A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale |
title_fullStr |
A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale |
title_full_unstemmed |
A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale |
title_sort |
spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered north atlantic right whale |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010067706 |
op_coverage |
ATLANTIQUE NORD |
genre |
Eubalaena glacialis Eubalaena japonica Newfoundland North Atlantic North Atlantic right whale Norwegian Sea |
genre_facet |
Eubalaena glacialis Eubalaena japonica Newfoundland North Atlantic North Atlantic right whale Norwegian Sea |
op_relation |
https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010067706 oai:ird.fr:fdi:010067706 Monsarrat Sophie, Pennino M. G., Smith T. D., Reeves R. R., Meynard C. N., Kaplan D., Rodrigues A. S. L. A spatially explicit estimate of the prewhaling abundance of the endangered North Atlantic right whale. 2016, 30 (4), p. 783-791 |
_version_ |
1810442752525074432 |