Dear MARMAM colleagues, 

 We are pleased to announce that the following paper on North Atlantic right 
whales is now available online: 


 Enrico Pirotta, Robert S. Schick, Philip K. Hamilton, Catriona M. Harris, 
Joshua Hewitt, Amy R. Knowlton, Scott D. Kraus, Erin Meyer-Gutbrod, Michael J. 
Moore, Heather M. Pettis, Theoni Photopoulou, Rosalind M. Rolland, Peter L. 
Tyack, Len Thomas. Estimating the effects of stressors on the health, survival 
and reproduction of a critically endangered, long-lived species. Oikos. 


 Abstract: 


 Quantifying the cumulative effects of stressors on individuals and populations 
can inform the development of effective management and conservation strategies. 
We developed a Bayesian state-space model to assess the effects of multiple 
stressors on individual survival and reproduction. In the model, stressor 
effects on vital rates are mediated by changes in underlying health, allowing 
for the comparison of effect sizes while accounting for intrinsic factors that 
might affect an individual’s vulnerability and resilience. We applied the model 
to a 50-year dataset of sightings, calving events, and stressor exposure of 
critically endangered North Atlantic right whales (Eubalaena glacialis). The 
viability of this population is threatened by a complex set of stressors, 
including vessel strikes, entanglement in fishing gear and fluctuating prey 
availability. We estimated that blunt and deep vessel strike injuries and 
severe entanglement injuries had the largest effect on the health of exposed 
individuals, reinforcing the urgent need for mitigation measures. Prey 
abundance had a smaller but protracted effect on health across individuals, and 
estimated long-term trends in survival and reproduction followed the trend of 
the prey index, highlighting that long-term ecosystem-based management 
strategies are also required. Our approach can be applied to quantify the 
effects of multiple stressors on any long-lived species where suitable 
indicators of health and long-term monitoring data are available. 


 Keywords: cumulative effects; health; multiple stressors; North Atlantic right 
whale; population consequences; state space modelling. 


 A PDF copy of the paper can be downloaded for free from: 


 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/oik.09801 


 Please do not hesitate to contact me for any question regarding our work. 


 Best Regards, 
Enrico Pirotta 

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