Dear colleagues,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our new perspective article on 
post-recovery population dynamics in marine mammals:

Joshua D. Stewart, Roxanne S. Beltran, M. Tim Tinker, Rethinking Post-recovery 
“Stability” in Long-Lived Vertebrates, BioScience (2026) 
https://doi.org/10.1093/biosci/biaf211

Abstract:
Conservation success stories are often framed as rebounds from scarcity to 
stability, but what if stability isn’t the right goal? Some of the most 
dramatic recoveries in the animal kingdom are now revealing that major 
demographic swings occur even in the absence of human exploitation and may, in 
fact, be amplified in recovered populations. We propose that extreme 
demographic variability is not an anomaly but a natural outcome of life history 
strategies evolved to buffer against environmental fluctuations in dynamic 
ecosystems. As decades of conservation efforts pay off and more populations 
reach recovery targets, managers, scientists, and the public should be prepared 
for increasingly frequent periods of elevated mortality and reduced birth rates 
as a normal part of the recovery process.

Link to paper: 
https://academic.oup.com/bioscience/advance-article-abstract/doi/10.1093/biosci/biaf211/8442271?utm_source=authortollfreelink&utm_campaign=bioscience&utm_medium=email<https://track.smtpsendmail.com/9032119/c?p=0ULEtLmxmFfzTYhMcdti8D-9RaP9gqZbFOYm7u8abblWCIjIwX0C62wI46i34Ehr4jzFwMvx6cUGxPnf5E8gdlA2Nnt_YKElQ5LyGzs8jMxE0_G7R96qAOBA12GMLcwWkRJ2jFqATTFc9a7MGXNFHr40H7-o0p_yl_hbwqh0aVG6I5lJ9LmFCWMIyKz0jiDBPS8pEZIRfZhHJhUQSBjN6OKr1GcLkiirrEPqEcxWloChglDgcAvzF0Ka0yrB1XLPTvlpe5u1LAy3lYXvzfpRwt2YoTc_HrCsN2bwx50vAancIT5S9yBvXjNgyH0LL2Ni7CpXH3jMYt91T04qpLD8EnXNnBaSG58GrObABOQj72I=>

Cheers,
Josh

Joshua Stewart, Ph.D.
Pronouns: He/Him
Assistant Professor, Marine Mammal Institute
Oregon State University, Hatfield Marine Science Center


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