Disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal

Considerable uncertainties often surround the causes of long-term changes in population abundance. One striking example is the precipitous decline of southern sea lions (SSL; Otaria flavescens) at the Falkland Islands, from 80 555 pups in the mid 1930s to just 5506 pups in 1965. Despite an increase...

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Main Authors: Baylis, Alastair M. M., Orben, Rachael A., Arnould, John P. Y., Christiansen, Fredrik, Hays, Graeme C., Staniland, Iain J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
unknown
Published: Ecological Society of America
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/hq37vq147
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spelling ftoregonstate:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:hq37vq147 2024-04-14T08:18:01+00:00 Disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal Baylis, Alastair M. M. Orben, Rachael A. Arnould, John P. Y. Christiansen, Fredrik Hays, Graeme C. Staniland, Iain J. https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/hq37vq147 English [eng] eng unknown Ecological Society of America https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/hq37vq147 Copyright Not Evaluated Article ftoregonstate 2024-03-21T15:47:26Z Considerable uncertainties often surround the causes of long-term changes in population abundance. One striking example is the precipitous decline of southern sea lions (SSL; Otaria flavescens) at the Falkland Islands, from 80 555 pups in the mid 1930s to just 5506 pups in 1965. Despite an increase in SSL abundance over the past two decades, the population has not recovered, with the number of pups born in 2014 (minimum 4443 pups) less than 6% of the 1930s estimate. The order-of-magnitude decline is primarily attributed to commercial sealing in Argentina. Here, we test this established paradigm and alternative hypotheses by assessing (1) commercial sealing at the Falkland Islands, (2) winter migration of SSL from the Falkland Islands to Argentina, (3) whether the number of SSL in Argentina could have sustained the reported level of exploitation, and (4) environmental change. The most parsimonious hypothesis explaining the SSL population decline was environmental change. Specifically, analysis of 160 years of winter sea surface temperatures revealed marked changes, including a period of warming between 1930 and 1950 that was consistent with the period of SSL decline. Sea surface temperature changes likely influenced the distribution or availability of SSL prey and impacted its population dynamics. We suggest that historical harvesting may not always be the “smoking gun” as is often purported. Rather, our conclusions support the growing evidence for bottom-up forcing on the abundance of species at lower trophic levels (e.g., plankton and fish) and resulting impacts on higher trophic levels across a broad range of ecosystems. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Ecological Society of America and can be found at: http://www.esajournals.org/loi/ecol Keywords: killer whales, megafaunal collapse, historical baselines, South Atlantic, pinniped, Orcinus orca, top-down control, ocean climate, bottom-up forcing Article in Journal/Newspaper Orca Orcinus orca ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University) Argentina
institution Open Polar
collection ScholarsArchive@OSU (Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregonstate
language English
unknown
description Considerable uncertainties often surround the causes of long-term changes in population abundance. One striking example is the precipitous decline of southern sea lions (SSL; Otaria flavescens) at the Falkland Islands, from 80 555 pups in the mid 1930s to just 5506 pups in 1965. Despite an increase in SSL abundance over the past two decades, the population has not recovered, with the number of pups born in 2014 (minimum 4443 pups) less than 6% of the 1930s estimate. The order-of-magnitude decline is primarily attributed to commercial sealing in Argentina. Here, we test this established paradigm and alternative hypotheses by assessing (1) commercial sealing at the Falkland Islands, (2) winter migration of SSL from the Falkland Islands to Argentina, (3) whether the number of SSL in Argentina could have sustained the reported level of exploitation, and (4) environmental change. The most parsimonious hypothesis explaining the SSL population decline was environmental change. Specifically, analysis of 160 years of winter sea surface temperatures revealed marked changes, including a period of warming between 1930 and 1950 that was consistent with the period of SSL decline. Sea surface temperature changes likely influenced the distribution or availability of SSL prey and impacted its population dynamics. We suggest that historical harvesting may not always be the “smoking gun” as is often purported. Rather, our conclusions support the growing evidence for bottom-up forcing on the abundance of species at lower trophic levels (e.g., plankton and fish) and resulting impacts on higher trophic levels across a broad range of ecosystems. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by Ecological Society of America and can be found at: http://www.esajournals.org/loi/ecol Keywords: killer whales, megafaunal collapse, historical baselines, South Atlantic, pinniped, Orcinus orca, top-down control, ocean climate, bottom-up forcing
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Baylis, Alastair M. M.
Orben, Rachael A.
Arnould, John P. Y.
Christiansen, Fredrik
Hays, Graeme C.
Staniland, Iain J.
spellingShingle Baylis, Alastair M. M.
Orben, Rachael A.
Arnould, John P. Y.
Christiansen, Fredrik
Hays, Graeme C.
Staniland, Iain J.
Disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal
author_facet Baylis, Alastair M. M.
Orben, Rachael A.
Arnould, John P. Y.
Christiansen, Fredrik
Hays, Graeme C.
Staniland, Iain J.
author_sort Baylis, Alastair M. M.
title Disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal
title_short Disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal
title_full Disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal
title_fullStr Disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal
title_full_unstemmed Disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal
title_sort disentangling the cause of a catastrophic population decline in a large marine mammal
publisher Ecological Society of America
url https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/hq37vq147
geographic Argentina
geographic_facet Argentina
genre Orca
Orcinus orca
genre_facet Orca
Orcinus orca
op_relation https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/hq37vq147
op_rights Copyright Not Evaluated
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