Kia ora MARMAM community,


My colleagues and I are happy to share the publication of our new open-access 
paper:


Emma L Betty, Karen A Stockin, Bethany Hinton, Barbara A Bollard, Mark B Orams, 
Sinéad Murphy, Age- and sex-specific survivorship of the Southern Hemisphere 
long-finned pilot whale (Globicephala melas edwardii), Journal of Mammalogy, 
2022;, gyac085, https://doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyac085


Abstract:

Biodiversity loss is a major global challenge of the 21st century. Ultimately, 
extinctions of species are determined by birth and death rates; thus, 
conservation management of at-risk species is dependent on robust demographic 
data. In this study, data gathered from 381 (227 females, 154 males) 
long-finned pilot whales (Globicephala melas edwardii) that died in 14 
stranding events on the New Zealand coast between 2006 and 2017 were used to 
construct the first age- and sex-specific life tables for the subspecies. 
Survivorship curves were fitted to these data using (1) a traditional maximum 
likelihood approach, and (2) Siler’s competing-risk model. Life table 
construction and subsequent survival curves revealed distinct differences in 
the age- and sex-specific survival rates, with females outliving males. Both 
sexes revealed slightly elevated rates of mortality among the youngest 
age-classes (<2 years) with postweaning mortality rates decreasing and 
remaining relatively low until the average life expectancy is reached; 11.3 
years for males and 14.7 years for females. Overall (total) mortality is 
estimated to be 8.8% and 6.8% per annum for males and females, respectively. 
The mortality curve resembles that of other large mammals, with high calf 
mortality, lower postweaning mortality, and an exponentially increasing risk of 
senescent mortality. An accelerated mortality rate was observed in mature 
females, in contrast to the closely related short-finned pilot whale (G. 
macrorhynchus), which selects for an extension to the postreproductive life 
span. The reason for the observed differences in the mortality rate 
acceleration and postreproductive life span between the two pilot whale species 
have not been established and warrant further investigation. Obtaining robust 
information on the life history of long-lived species is challenging, but 
essential to improve our understanding of population dynamics and help predict 
how future pressures may impact populations. This study illustrates how 
demographic data from cetacean stranding events can improve knowledge of 
species survival rates, thus providing essential information for conservation 
management.




Ngā mihi nui,
Emma


Emma Betty, PhD

Postdoctoral Fellow

School of Natural Sciences | Massey University

Postal Address: Private Bag 102 904, North Shore, Auckland 0745, New Zealand

Physical Address: Building 5, Gate 4, The Station Crescent,  Albany, Auckland, 
New Zealand

 [cid:dc21d1ab-6c82-45f6-a4f1-e23186e490e3] 
<https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Emma_Betty>   
[cid:98f74ef6-cfb7-487e-a0d3-d490afb0fc57] 
<https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?hl=en&user=2RDsBAIAAAAJ>   
[cid:f8ef8cf5-9ddc-4107-94d9-7d7bcefab55b] <https://twitter.com/emmalbetty>   
[cid:580e6943-6186-49c3-ba82-6d57462aa796] 
<https://www.facebook.com/CetaceanEcologyOrg>    
[cid:33efa7e7-5973-48b9-8231-9c64a0f98689] 
<https://www.linkedin.com/in/emma-betty-04ab8817/>

[cid:d9d2e4ae-e4ad-48d7-af85-62560cd91446]<https://www.cetaceanecology.org/>


<https://www.cetaceanecology.org/>







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