Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia

Effective conservation and management are paramount to long-term recovery of endangered species. Achieving recovery relies on knowledge of their behaviour and habitats. Neophoca cinerea (Australian sea lion) is an endangered species endemic to Australia. This study focused on three key questions aim...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Osterrieder, Sylvia K
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/
https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/3/OSTERRIEDER%20Sylvia-thesis_nosignature.pdf
id ftuvictoria:oai:eprints.vu.edu.au:32297
record_format openpolar
spelling ftuvictoria:oai:eprints.vu.edu.au:32297 2024-02-11T10:08:34+01:00 Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia Osterrieder, Sylvia K 2016 text https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/ https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/3/OSTERRIEDER%20Sylvia-thesis_nosignature.pdf en eng https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/ https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/3/OSTERRIEDER%20Sylvia-thesis_nosignature.pdf Osterrieder, Sylvia K (2016) Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia. PhD thesis, Victoria University. 0502 Environmental Science and Management College of Science and Engineering Pinnipeds identification hauling-out humans habitats behavioural patterns external stressors environmental monitoring environmental management anthropogenic impacts breeding cycles Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2016 ftuvictoria 2024-01-22T23:35:57Z Effective conservation and management are paramount to long-term recovery of endangered species. Achieving recovery relies on knowledge of their behaviour and habitats. Neophoca cinerea (Australian sea lion) is an endangered species endemic to Australia. This study focused on three key questions aimed at improving its management near Perth (Western Australia): testing a sea lion identification tool, describing haul-out patterns, and identifying human disturbance sources. N. cinerea whisker spot patterns as a tool for individual identification were tested using Chamfer distance-transform. Patterns contained sufficient information to reliably (99%) identify individuals in populations of 50, matching 90% correctly when testing known captive animals photographed at 90°. Off-angle photographs resulted in 48% correct matches. Resighting in the wild proved unfeasible in this study. However, resights of four scarred N. cinerea at Carnac and Seal Islands (the main study sites) confirmed returns and visitations to both islands. To describe haul-out patterns, generalized additive models were applied to hourly counts between 0800h- 1600h. N. cinerea numbers followed 17-18 month cycles, inversely aligned with the breeding cycle. During non-breeding seasons, hauled-out numbers increased throughout the day, and were associated with air temperature and tide. Research investigating human disturbance indicated that all human activity types elicited responses, which varied between islands depending upon stimulus types (vessel types, people), ranges to stimuli, and activities at each islands. People at close range elicited most elevated responses, including aggression and retreating. This occurred mainly at Carnac Island since direct beach access is allowed. Significant rates of lower-level disturbances were also elicited by vessels within close proximity, including paddlers and those undertaking noisy activities. Resulting recommendations include further restriction and enforcement in approach distances allowed. Also, ongoing ... Thesis Seal Islands VU Research Repository Seal Islands ENVELOPE(69.633,69.633,-48.950,-48.950)
institution Open Polar
collection VU Research Repository
op_collection_id ftuvictoria
language English
topic 0502 Environmental Science and Management
College of Science and Engineering
Pinnipeds
identification
hauling-out
humans
habitats
behavioural patterns
external stressors
environmental monitoring
environmental management
anthropogenic impacts
breeding cycles
spellingShingle 0502 Environmental Science and Management
College of Science and Engineering
Pinnipeds
identification
hauling-out
humans
habitats
behavioural patterns
external stressors
environmental monitoring
environmental management
anthropogenic impacts
breeding cycles
Osterrieder, Sylvia K
Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia
topic_facet 0502 Environmental Science and Management
College of Science and Engineering
Pinnipeds
identification
hauling-out
humans
habitats
behavioural patterns
external stressors
environmental monitoring
environmental management
anthropogenic impacts
breeding cycles
description Effective conservation and management are paramount to long-term recovery of endangered species. Achieving recovery relies on knowledge of their behaviour and habitats. Neophoca cinerea (Australian sea lion) is an endangered species endemic to Australia. This study focused on three key questions aimed at improving its management near Perth (Western Australia): testing a sea lion identification tool, describing haul-out patterns, and identifying human disturbance sources. N. cinerea whisker spot patterns as a tool for individual identification were tested using Chamfer distance-transform. Patterns contained sufficient information to reliably (99%) identify individuals in populations of 50, matching 90% correctly when testing known captive animals photographed at 90°. Off-angle photographs resulted in 48% correct matches. Resighting in the wild proved unfeasible in this study. However, resights of four scarred N. cinerea at Carnac and Seal Islands (the main study sites) confirmed returns and visitations to both islands. To describe haul-out patterns, generalized additive models were applied to hourly counts between 0800h- 1600h. N. cinerea numbers followed 17-18 month cycles, inversely aligned with the breeding cycle. During non-breeding seasons, hauled-out numbers increased throughout the day, and were associated with air temperature and tide. Research investigating human disturbance indicated that all human activity types elicited responses, which varied between islands depending upon stimulus types (vessel types, people), ranges to stimuli, and activities at each islands. People at close range elicited most elevated responses, including aggression and retreating. This occurred mainly at Carnac Island since direct beach access is allowed. Significant rates of lower-level disturbances were also elicited by vessels within close proximity, including paddlers and those undertaking noisy activities. Resulting recommendations include further restriction and enforcement in approach distances allowed. Also, ongoing ...
format Thesis
author Osterrieder, Sylvia K
author_facet Osterrieder, Sylvia K
author_sort Osterrieder, Sylvia K
title Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia
title_short Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia
title_full Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia
title_fullStr Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia
title_sort conservation ecology and human disturbance of australian sea lions (neophoca cinerea) in western australia
publishDate 2016
url https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/
https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/3/OSTERRIEDER%20Sylvia-thesis_nosignature.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(69.633,69.633,-48.950,-48.950)
geographic Seal Islands
geographic_facet Seal Islands
genre Seal Islands
genre_facet Seal Islands
op_relation https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/
https://vuir.vu.edu.au/32297/3/OSTERRIEDER%20Sylvia-thesis_nosignature.pdf
Osterrieder, Sylvia K (2016) Conservation ecology and human disturbance of Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) in Western Australia. PhD thesis, Victoria University.
_version_ 1790607970593144832