The following paper has just been published:

Whitehead, H., and M. Shin. 2022. Current global population size, post-whaling 
trend and historical trajectory of sperm whales. Scientific Reports 12: 19468.

It is open access and available at:

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-24107-7


Abstract:

The sperm whale lives in most deep ice-free waters of the globe. It was 
targeted during two periods of whaling peaking in the 1840’s and 1960’s. Using 
a habitat suitability model, we extrapolated estimates of abundance from visual 
and acoustic surveys to give a global estimate of 736,053 sperm whales (CV = 
0.218) in 1993. Estimates of trends in the post-whaling era suggest that: 
whaling, by affecting the sex ratio and/or the social cohesion of females, 
reduced recovery rates well after whaling ceased; preferentially-targeted adult 
males show the best evidence of recovery, presumably due to recruitment from 
breeding populations; several decades post-whaling, sperm whale populations not 
facing much human impact are recovering slowly, but populations may be 
declining in areas with substantial anthropogenic footprint. A theta-logistic 
population model enhanced to simulate spatial structure and the non-removal 
impacts of whaling indicated a pre-whaling population of 1,949,698 (CV = 0.178) 
in 1710 being reduced by whaling, and then then recovering a little to about 
844,761 (CV = 0.209) in 2022. There is much uncertainty about these numbers and 
trends. A larger population estimate than produced by a similar analysis in 
2002 is principally due to a better assessment of ascertainment bias.


Hal Whitehead, Dalhousie University (hwhit...@dal.ca)
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