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Risk for overexploiting a seemingly stable seal population : influence of multiple stressors and hunting

Silva, Willian T.A.F. LU orcid ; Bottagisio, Elio ; Härkönen, Tero ; Galatius, Anders ; Olsen, Morten Tange and Harding, Karin C. (2021) In Ecosphere 12(1).
Abstract

Conservation efforts have mainly been focused on depleted species or populations, but many formerly reduced marine mammal populations have recovered to historical abundances. This calls for new management strategies and new models for ecological risk assessment that incorporate local density dependence and multiple environmental stressors. The harbor seal metapopulation in Swedish and Danish waters has increased from about 2500 to 25,000 over the past 40 yr. Trend analysis based on aerial survey data and somatic growth curves indicates that the population is close to carrying capacity. We performed a population viability analysis based on realistic life history parameters and investigated a range of potential scenarios caused by future... (More)

Conservation efforts have mainly been focused on depleted species or populations, but many formerly reduced marine mammal populations have recovered to historical abundances. This calls for new management strategies and new models for ecological risk assessment that incorporate local density dependence and multiple environmental stressors. The harbor seal metapopulation in Swedish and Danish waters has increased from about 2500 to 25,000 over the past 40 yr. Trend analysis based on aerial survey data and somatic growth curves indicates that the population is close to carrying capacity. We performed a population viability analysis based on realistic life history parameters and investigated a range of potential scenarios caused by future stressors. If the population is able to resume its high intrinsic rate of increase at about 11% annually, when pushed down below carrying capacity, it can also sustain additional mortality such as modest hunting and infrequent epizootics. However, if xenobiotics will cause even a slight reduction in average fecundity, the population becomes significantly more vulnerable. In the absence of epizootics, and given full reproductive capacity, hunting of a few hundred animals annually is not harmful to the long-term persistence of the population. Nevertheless, a slight decrease in growth potential, for example, caused by exposure to endocrine disruptors, makes even limited hunting risky. Our study shows how an apparently stable and abundant marine mammal population can be close to a point of rapid population decline. Thus, careful monitoring of population size, growth rate, health, and exposure to xenobiotics as well as recording of the age and sex structure of the hunt is required to avoid repeating the history of overexploitation and another population collapse.

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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
conservation, hunting, Phoca vitulina, population dynamics, strategy
in
Ecosphere
volume
12
issue
1
article number
e03343
publisher
Ecological Society of America
external identifiers
  • scopus:85099922546
ISSN
2150-8925
DOI
10.1002/ecs2.3343
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
94675c66-08d3-47fa-85a2-a45733cb2a11
date added to LUP
2021-12-09 13:22:12
date last changed
2023-02-21 10:27:55
@article{94675c66-08d3-47fa-85a2-a45733cb2a11,
  abstract     = {{<p>Conservation efforts have mainly been focused on depleted species or populations, but many formerly reduced marine mammal populations have recovered to historical abundances. This calls for new management strategies and new models for ecological risk assessment that incorporate local density dependence and multiple environmental stressors. The harbor seal metapopulation in Swedish and Danish waters has increased from about 2500 to 25,000 over the past 40 yr. Trend analysis based on aerial survey data and somatic growth curves indicates that the population is close to carrying capacity. We performed a population viability analysis based on realistic life history parameters and investigated a range of potential scenarios caused by future stressors. If the population is able to resume its high intrinsic rate of increase at about 11% annually, when pushed down below carrying capacity, it can also sustain additional mortality such as modest hunting and infrequent epizootics. However, if xenobiotics will cause even a slight reduction in average fecundity, the population becomes significantly more vulnerable. In the absence of epizootics, and given full reproductive capacity, hunting of a few hundred animals annually is not harmful to the long-term persistence of the population. Nevertheless, a slight decrease in growth potential, for example, caused by exposure to endocrine disruptors, makes even limited hunting risky. Our study shows how an apparently stable and abundant marine mammal population can be close to a point of rapid population decline. Thus, careful monitoring of population size, growth rate, health, and exposure to xenobiotics as well as recording of the age and sex structure of the hunt is required to avoid repeating the history of overexploitation and another population collapse.</p>}},
  author       = {{Silva, Willian T.A.F. and Bottagisio, Elio and Härkönen, Tero and Galatius, Anders and Olsen, Morten Tange and Harding, Karin C.}},
  issn         = {{2150-8925}},
  keywords     = {{conservation; hunting; Phoca vitulina; population dynamics; strategy}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Ecological Society of America}},
  series       = {{Ecosphere}},
  title        = {{Risk for overexploiting a seemingly stable seal population : influence of multiple stressors and hunting}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.3343}},
  doi          = {{10.1002/ecs2.3343}},
  volume       = {{12}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}