MARMAM subscribers,

We are pleased to announce the publication of a new paper in Conservation 
Biology: 

VAN DER HOOP, J. M., MOORE, M. J., BARCO, S. G., COLE, T. V.N., DAOUST, P.-Y., 
HENRY, A. G., MCALPINE, D. F., MCLELLAN, W. A., WIMMER, T. and SOLOW, A. R. 
(2012), Assessment of Management to Mitigate Anthropogenic Effects on Large 
Whales. Conservation Biology. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2012.01934.x

The paper is available open access, in early view online: 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1523-1739.2012.01934.x/abstract

Abstract:  United States and Canadian governments have responded to legal 
requirements to reduce human-induced whale mortality via vessel strikes and 
entanglement in fishing gear by implementing a suite of regulatory actions. We 
analyzed the spatial and temporal patterns of mortality of large whales in the 
Northwest Atlantic (23.5°N to 48.0°N), 1970 through 2009, in the context of 
management changes. We used a multinomial logistic model fitted by maximum 
likelihood to detect trends in cause-specific mortalities with time. We 
compared the number of human-caused mortalities with U.S. federally established 
levels of potential biological removal (i.e., species-specific sustainable 
human-caused mortality). From 1970 through 2009, 1762 mortalities (all known) 
and serious injuries (likely fatal) involved 8 species of large whales. We 
determined cause of death for 43% of all mortalities; of those, 67% (502) 
resulted from human interactions. Entanglement in fishing gear was the primary 
cause of death across all species (n= 323), followed by natural causes (n= 248) 
and vessel strikes (n= 171). Established sustainable levels of mortality were 
consistently exceeded in 2 species by up to 650%. Probabilities of entanglement 
and vessel-strike mortality increased significantly from 1990 through 2009. 
There was no significant change in the local intensity of all or vessel-strike 
mortalities before and after 2003, the year after which numerous mitigation 
efforts were enacted. So far, regulatory efforts have not reduced the lethal 
effects of human activities to large whales on a population-range basis, 
although we do not exclude the possibility of success of targeted measures for 
specific local habitats that were not within the resolution of our analyses. It 
is unclear how shortfalls in management design or compliance relate to our 
findings. Analyses such as the one we conducted are crucial in critically 
evaluating wildlife-management decisions. The results of these analyses can 
provide managers with direction for modifying regulated measures and can be 
applied globally to mortality-driven conservation issues.

Keywords:
entanglement;evaluation of management/mitigation 
efforts;human-interaction;large whales;
mortality;necropsy;vessel-strike

-----------------------------------------------------------
Julie van der Hoop
Graduate Student
MIT/WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography
Woods Hole, MA 02543


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