Patterns of mortality in endangered Cook Inlet beluga whales: Insights from pairing a long‐term photo‐identification study with stranding records

Mortality is a demographic metric crucial for understanding the dynamics of endangered populations such as Cook Inlet beluga whales (CIBWs, Delphinapterus leucas), but patterns of mortality are currently not well understood for CIBWs, making decisions about recovery actions challenging. We combined...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMarine mammal science Vol. 37; no. 2; pp. 492 - 511
Main Authors McGuire, Tamara L., Shelden, Kim E. W., Himes Boor, Gina K., Stephens, Amber D., McClung, John R., Garner, Christopher, Goertz, Caroline E. C., Burek‐Huntington, Kathleen A., O'Corry‐Crowe, Greg, Wright, Bruce
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Hoboken, USA John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.04.2021
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:Mortality is a demographic metric crucial for understanding the dynamics of endangered populations such as Cook Inlet beluga whales (CIBWs, Delphinapterus leucas), but patterns of mortality are currently not well understood for CIBWs, making decisions about recovery actions challenging. We combined long‐term photo‐ID data from approximately 420 individual belugas identified during the period 2005–2017 with stranding data from 95 dead belugas to identify patterns of mortality with respect to age, sex, geographic range, cause of death, and to estimate minimum mortality rates. Reported mortality was greatest for adults of reproductive age, followed by calves, with fewer subadults and no adults older than 49 years in the stranding data set despite lifespans of 70+ years reported in other beluga populations. Dead females and males were evenly represented. Live stranding was the predominant assigned cause of death but represented only ~33% of deaths of known cause. Causal factors for the majority of deaths and live strandings are unknown. Annual mortality estimated from reported carcasses relative to total population size averaged 2.2%. Our analysis advances our current understanding of mortality patterns in CIBWs but linking a greater proportion of carcasses to photo‐ID individuals would further improve our understanding; we conclude with recommendations for achieving this.
Bibliography:Funding information
Knik Tribe, Grant/Award Number: Species Recovery Grant NOAA‐NMFS‐PRPO‐2017‐2004972
ISSN:0824-0469
1748-7692
DOI:10.1111/mms.12766