Population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales

The Southern Resident killer whale population (Orcinus orca) was listed as endangered in 2005. Population growth is constrained by low offspring production for the number of reproductive females in the population. We are examining nutritional and toxicant impacts on offspring production in these wha...

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Main Authors: Wasser, Samuel K, Lundin, Jessica I.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Western CEDAR 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/species_food_webs/70
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftwestwashington:oai:cedar.wwu.edu:ssec-2176 2023-05-15T17:03:37+02:00 Population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales Wasser, Samuel K Lundin, Jessica I. 2016-01-01T08:00:00Z https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/species_food_webs/70 English eng Western CEDAR https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/species_food_webs/70 This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103, USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Records, University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University. Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Fresh Water Studies Life Sciences Marine Biology Natural Resources and Conservation text 2016 ftwestwashington 2022-09-14T06:00:00Z The Southern Resident killer whale population (Orcinus orca) was listed as endangered in 2005. Population growth is constrained by low offspring production for the number of reproductive females in the population. We are examining nutritional and toxicant impacts on offspring production in these whales through noninvasive endocrine and toxicant measures acquired from their scat, located by detection dogs. These methods enabled us to obtain a relatively large sample size to assess pregnancy occurrence and failure as well as temporal impacts on pregnancy success from poor nutrition, toxicants and other stressors. Up to two thirds of all pregnancies detected using reproductive hormone metrics miscarried; one third of these miscarriages likely occurred relatively late in gestation when the cost is especially high. Nutritional stress was shown to be an important contributor to pregnancy failure in these fish-eating whales that heavily rely on threatened or endangered Chinook salmon. Elevated lipid metabolism under nutritional stress increases levels and toxic potential of persistent organic pollutants, which may add to these cumulative impacts. Results point to the importance of promoting salmon recovery to enhance population growth of these whales. The physiologic and toxicant measures used in this study can also be used to monitor the success of management actions, promoting adaptive management of this important apex predator to the Pacific Northwest. Text Killer Whale Orca Orcinus orca Killer whale Western Washington University: CEDAR (Contributing to Education through Digital Access to Research) Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Western Washington University: CEDAR (Contributing to Education through Digital Access to Research)
op_collection_id ftwestwashington
language English
topic Fresh Water Studies
Life Sciences
Marine Biology
Natural Resources and Conservation
spellingShingle Fresh Water Studies
Life Sciences
Marine Biology
Natural Resources and Conservation
Wasser, Samuel K
Lundin, Jessica I.
Population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales
topic_facet Fresh Water Studies
Life Sciences
Marine Biology
Natural Resources and Conservation
description The Southern Resident killer whale population (Orcinus orca) was listed as endangered in 2005. Population growth is constrained by low offspring production for the number of reproductive females in the population. We are examining nutritional and toxicant impacts on offspring production in these whales through noninvasive endocrine and toxicant measures acquired from their scat, located by detection dogs. These methods enabled us to obtain a relatively large sample size to assess pregnancy occurrence and failure as well as temporal impacts on pregnancy success from poor nutrition, toxicants and other stressors. Up to two thirds of all pregnancies detected using reproductive hormone metrics miscarried; one third of these miscarriages likely occurred relatively late in gestation when the cost is especially high. Nutritional stress was shown to be an important contributor to pregnancy failure in these fish-eating whales that heavily rely on threatened or endangered Chinook salmon. Elevated lipid metabolism under nutritional stress increases levels and toxic potential of persistent organic pollutants, which may add to these cumulative impacts. Results point to the importance of promoting salmon recovery to enhance population growth of these whales. The physiologic and toxicant measures used in this study can also be used to monitor the success of management actions, promoting adaptive management of this important apex predator to the Pacific Northwest.
format Text
author Wasser, Samuel K
Lundin, Jessica I.
author_facet Wasser, Samuel K
Lundin, Jessica I.
author_sort Wasser, Samuel K
title Population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales
title_short Population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales
title_full Population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales
title_fullStr Population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales
title_full_unstemmed Population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales
title_sort population growth is limited by nutrition and toxin impacts on pregnancy success in endangered southern resident killer whales
publisher Western CEDAR
publishDate 2016
url https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/species_food_webs/70
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Killer Whale
Orca
Orcinus orca
Killer whale
genre_facet Killer Whale
Orca
Orcinus orca
Killer whale
op_source Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference
op_relation https://cedar.wwu.edu/ssec/2016ssec/species_food_webs/70
op_rights This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws. For more information about rights or obtaining copies of this resource, please contact University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University, Bellingham, WA 98225-9103, USA (360-650-7534; heritage.resources@wwu.edu) and refer to the collection name and identifier. Any materials cited must be attributed to the Salish Sea Ecosystem Conference Records, University Archives, Heritage Resources, Western Libraries, Western Washington University.
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