New report available

Baird, R.W. 2009. A review of false killer whales in Hawaiian waters: biology, 
status, and risk factors. Report prepared for the U.S. Marine Mammal Commission 
under Order No. E40475499.

Recent management and conservation issues have arisen concerning false killer 
whales in Hawaiian waters. Two demographically isolated populations have been 
identified, a small (estimated 123 individuals) island-associated population 
around the main Hawaiian Islands (hereafter Hawai‘i insular stock) and a larger 
(estimated 484 individuals) offshore population (hereafter Hawai‘i pelagic 
stock). Individuals within the Hawai‘i insular stock regularly move among 
islands and have been documented at distances of 110 km offshore. Less is known 
of movements/range of individuals from the Hawai‘i pelagic stock; one group has 
been documented 42 km offshore and individuals likely move beyond the Hawaiian 
Exclusive Economic Zone. No information is available to assess trends in the 
Hawai‘i pelagic stock. For the Hawai‘i insular stock, a significant decline in 
sighting rates from aerial surveys conducted between 1993 and 2003 suggests a 
large decline in population size. Other available evidence also supports a 
decline in population size for the insular stock: a reduction in sighting rates 
from boat-based surveys since the mid-1980s, lower than expected survival based 
on photo-identification data, and much higher sighting rates and larger group 
sizes in a 1989 aerial survey compared to boat-based surveys since 2000. False 
killer whales in Hawai‘i feed primarily on large game fish that are also the 
target of commercial and recreational fisheries. A number of potential 
conservation threats have been identified. Individuals from the Hawai‘i insular 
stock have elevated levels of persistent organic pollutants. Three of nine 
individuals sampled had levels high enough to potentially influence health. 
Because of the overlap between false killer whale diet and commercially 
harvested fish, reduced prey size or abundance could influence false killer 
whale foraging success or nutritional levels. Significant declines in body size 
and/or catch per unit effort have been documented for several false killer 
whale prey species in Hawaiian waters. False killer whales have been documented 
taking fish off lines in both nearshore and offshore fisheries. Depredation of 
caught fish may lead to retaliatory shooting by fishermen although, given 
potential fines and penalties, such shooting is not likely to occur where it 
may be witnessed; thus there is no information available to assess the 
potential for this to influence population dynamics. With the overlap in diet 
with commercially and recreationally harvested fish, the potential for hook 
ingestion, either from depredation or from free-swimming hooked fish, is 
relatively high. Based on studies elsewhere, hook ingestion would have a high 
likelihood of leading to mortality. Bycatch may occur in nearshore kaka line or 
shortline fisheries that use similar, but shorter gear to offshore longline 
fisheries, but there is no observer coverage of nearshore fisheries. False 
killer whales are the most frequently recorded bycaught cetacean in the 
Hawai‘i-based offshore longline fishery. Rates of serious injury and mortality 
have exceeded the potential biological removal (PBR) levels since bycatch rates 
and population levels were first available in 2000. Bycatch rates are 
underestimated as they do not take into account individuals that are not 
positively classified as to species or individuals that may break free with 
gear attached before being documented by observers. A number of research 
recommendations are presented to help reduce uncertainty and to clarify factors 
that may be influencing the population trajectories of both the Hawai‘i insular 
and Hawai‘i pelagic stocks, as well as to provide information that could be 
used to reduce bycatch rates or otherwise mitigate anthropogenic impacts on 
these populations.

A pdf copy can be downloaded from the Marine Mammal Commission web site at 
http://mmc.gov/reports/workshop/ or at 
http://www.cascadiaresearch.org/hawaii/falsekillerwhale.htm





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