Dear MARMAN community,

On behalf of my co-author, we are pleased to share our paper in Frontiers in 
Marine Science, which is open access and available 
here<https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.994481/full>.


Reed J, New L, Corkeron P and Harcourt R (2022) Multi-event modeling of true 
reproductive states of individual female right whales provides new insights 
into their decline. Front. Mar. Sci. 9:994481. doi: 10.3389/fmars.2022.994481.

Abstract:
Abundance and population trends of Critically Endangered North Atlantic right 
whales (Eubalaena glacialis, NARW) have been estimated using mark-recapture 
analyses where an individual's state is based upon set delineations of age, 
using historical estimates of age at first reproduction. Here we assigned 
individual females to states based upon their reproductive experience, rather 
than age. We developed a Bayesian mark-recapture-recovery model to investigate 
how survival, recapture, site-fidelity and dead-recovery probabilities vary for 
female NARW in different states, using data collected from 1977-2018. States 
were assigned as calves for individuals in their first year; pre-breeder for 
individuals greater than one year of age who had yet to produce a calf, or 
breeder if an individual had reproduced. A decline in abundance of female NARW 
was seen starting in 2014, with 185 females declining yearly to 142 by 2018. 
The largest decline was seen in breeding females, with 72 estimated to be alive 
at the beginning of 2018, while female pre-breeder abundance plateaued at 
around 70 between 2011- 2018. Females born from 2000 onwards had an average 4% 
(95% CI:0.03-0.06) chance of transitioning from pre-breeder to breeder, 
compared to 8% (95%CI:0.06-0.1) for females born prior. This reduction in 
transition rate from non-breeder to breeder for the current cohort resulted in 
breeding females declining to 51% of the female population by 2018. We show 
that a collapse in fecundity of breeding females, and the failure of 
pre-breeders to start breeding, is an important factor in understanding the 
current decline in abundance of the NARW.


Kind regards,
Josh
______________________________
Joshua Reed
PhD Candidate
Marine Predator Research Group
Room 385 E8A (14 Eastern Road)
School of Natural Sciences
Macquarie University
Sydney, NSW 2109,
Australia

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