Dear MARMAM,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the publication of our paper:

Rockwood RC, Calambokidis J, Jahncke J (2017) High mortality of blue, humpback 
and fin whales from modeling of vessel collisions on the U.S. West Coast 
suggests population impacts and insufficient protection. PLoS ONE 12(8): 
e0183052. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0183052

Abstract:
Mortality from collisions with vessels is one of the main human causes of death 
for large whales. Ship strikes are rarely witnessed and the distribution of 
strike risk and estimates of mortality remain uncertain at best. We estimated 
ship strike mortality for blue humpback and fin whales in U.S. West Coast 
waters using a novel application of a naval encounter model. Mortality 
estimates from the model were far higher than current minimum estimates derived 
from stranding records and are closer to extrapolations adjusted for detection 
probabilities of dead whales. Our most conservative model estimated mortality 
to be 7.8x, 2.0x and 2.7x the U.S. recommended limit for blue, humpback and fin 
whales, respectively, suggesting that death from vessel collisions may be a 
significant impediment to population growth and recovery. Comparing across the 
study area, the majority of strike mortality occurs in waters off California, 
from Bodega Bay south and tends to be concentrated in a band approximately 24 
Nm (44.5 km) offshore and in designated shipping lanes leading to and from 
major ports. While some mortality risk exists across nearly all West Coast 
waters, 74%, 82% and 65% of blue, humpback and fin whale mortality, 
respectively, occurs in just 10% of the study area, suggesting conservation 
efforts can be very effective if focused in these waters. Risk is highest in 
the shipping lanes off San Francisco and Long Beach, but only a fraction of 
total estimated mortality occurs in these proportionally small areas, making 
any conservation efforts exclusively within these areas insufficient to address 
overall strike mortality. We recommend combining shipping lane modifications 
and re-locations, ship speed reductions and creation of 'Areas to be Avoided' 
by vessels in ecologically important locations to address this significant 
source of whale mortality.

Best,

Cotton Rockwood, Senior Marine Ecologist
Point Blue Conservation Science
3820 Cypress Drive, Suite 11, Petaluma, CA 94954
(707) 781.2555 ext.366 | (707) 779.9879 (cell)
www.pointblue.org<http://www.pointblue.org/>  | Follow Point Blue on 
Facebook<http://www.facebook.com/PointBlueConservationScience>!

Point Blue - Conservation science for a healthy planet.


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