An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2

Sixteen years of fluke photo identifications have been used to create datasets of the New Caledonia humpback whale breeding ground (IWC sub-stock E2). Estimates of abundance have been calculated using both closed (CAPTURE 3-4 year intervals) and open models (POPAN and CJS). An abundance estimate usi...

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Main Authors: Garrigue, Claire, Albertson, Renee, Jackson, Jennifer A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: International Whaling Commission 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/500581/
http://iwc.int/private/downloads/7gh93qb0n9k4044gkgs00kgw0/SC-64-SH6.pdf
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spelling ftnerc:oai:nora.nerc.ac.uk:500581 2023-05-15T16:36:06+02:00 An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2 Garrigue, Claire Albertson, Renee Jackson, Jennifer A. 2012 http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/500581/ http://iwc.int/private/downloads/7gh93qb0n9k4044gkgs00kgw0/SC-64-SH6.pdf unknown International Whaling Commission Garrigue, Claire; Albertson, Renee; Jackson, Jennifer A. orcid:0000-0003-4158-1924 . 2012 An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2. Scientific Committee of the International Whaling Commission, Paper (SC/64/SH6). 25, pp. Publication - Article NonPeerReviewed 2012 ftnerc 2023-02-04T19:36:24Z Sixteen years of fluke photo identifications have been used to create datasets of the New Caledonia humpback whale breeding ground (IWC sub-stock E2). Estimates of abundance have been calculated using both closed (CAPTURE 3-4 year intervals) and open models (POPAN and CJS). An abundance estimate using photo-identification that was done previously for this population (1996-2005) indicated a very small population (N=344 CI 208-480 CV=0.72). Then, beginning in 2006 through our current estimate to 2011 all models we examined show a trend of increasing abundance with a large “pulse” after 2008. This pattern of abundance is similar over all survey areas. Whether these whales represent part of the New Caledonia sub-stock or permanent or temporary immigration from different regions is currently unclear. We hypothesize that this anomalous increase could be an overspill of the East Australia population, which is currently increasing at a high growth rate. Further analysis in future years will help to track the origin of these whales and to decipher if this is indeed an anomalous “pulse” of visitors or the beginning of a trend in population growth. For the purpose of the IWC Comprehensive Assessment of Southern Hemisphere Humpback whales for the IWC breeding sub-stock E2 we recommend the use of the yearly POPAN 2008 estimates for current abundance of the breeding sub-stock E2 N=562 (CV=0.19; CI 351-772) until the anomalous increase is more documented. Article in Journal/Newspaper Humpback Whale Natural Environment Research Council: NERC Open Research Archive
institution Open Polar
collection Natural Environment Research Council: NERC Open Research Archive
op_collection_id ftnerc
language unknown
description Sixteen years of fluke photo identifications have been used to create datasets of the New Caledonia humpback whale breeding ground (IWC sub-stock E2). Estimates of abundance have been calculated using both closed (CAPTURE 3-4 year intervals) and open models (POPAN and CJS). An abundance estimate using photo-identification that was done previously for this population (1996-2005) indicated a very small population (N=344 CI 208-480 CV=0.72). Then, beginning in 2006 through our current estimate to 2011 all models we examined show a trend of increasing abundance with a large “pulse” after 2008. This pattern of abundance is similar over all survey areas. Whether these whales represent part of the New Caledonia sub-stock or permanent or temporary immigration from different regions is currently unclear. We hypothesize that this anomalous increase could be an overspill of the East Australia population, which is currently increasing at a high growth rate. Further analysis in future years will help to track the origin of these whales and to decipher if this is indeed an anomalous “pulse” of visitors or the beginning of a trend in population growth. For the purpose of the IWC Comprehensive Assessment of Southern Hemisphere Humpback whales for the IWC breeding sub-stock E2 we recommend the use of the yearly POPAN 2008 estimates for current abundance of the breeding sub-stock E2 N=562 (CV=0.19; CI 351-772) until the anomalous increase is more documented.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Garrigue, Claire
Albertson, Renee
Jackson, Jennifer A.
spellingShingle Garrigue, Claire
Albertson, Renee
Jackson, Jennifer A.
An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2
author_facet Garrigue, Claire
Albertson, Renee
Jackson, Jennifer A.
author_sort Garrigue, Claire
title An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2
title_short An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2
title_full An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2
title_fullStr An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2
title_full_unstemmed An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2
title_sort anomalous increase in the new caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock e2
publisher International Whaling Commission
publishDate 2012
url http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/500581/
http://iwc.int/private/downloads/7gh93qb0n9k4044gkgs00kgw0/SC-64-SH6.pdf
genre Humpback Whale
genre_facet Humpback Whale
op_relation Garrigue, Claire; Albertson, Renee; Jackson, Jennifer A. orcid:0000-0003-4158-1924 . 2012 An anomalous increase in the New Caledonia humpback whales breeding sub-stock E2. Scientific Committee of the International Whaling Commission, Paper (SC/64/SH6). 25, pp.
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