News Release
Endangered North Atlantic Right Whale Study Says Population in Crisis
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
July 22, 2005
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
Ship strikes and entanglement in fishing gear are threatening
the survival of the North Atlantic right whale, one of the most
endangered whales with an estimated population of about
350. With eight recorded deaths in the past 16 months and a
population growth rate that has declined since 1980, scientists say
that unless emergency management actions are taken the population will
face a catastrophic decline and become extinct.
A report in the July 22 issue of the journal Science
says the recent loss of eight whales, six of them adult females and
three carrying near-term fetuses, is unprecedented in 25 years of study
of this species, Eubalaena glacialis.
Four of the females were beginning to bear calves, and since the
average lifetime calf production is as high as five calves, the deaths
of these females represents a reproductive loss of as many as 21
animals.
After almost 1,000 years of whaling that brought the species
close to extinction in the early 20th century, the North Atlantic right
whale has been protected from commercial whaling since 1935 but has
faced constant threats from human activities, mainly collisions with
ships and entanglement in fishing gear. In contrast, southern
right whales, Eubalaena australis, are thriving, with a population estimated at more than 10,000 animals and growing at more than seven percent each year.
According to the recent study, lead by Scott Kraus of the New England Aquarium, 50 right whales have been reported
dead since 1986, at least half of them from human activities. At least
19 were killed by vessel collisions and at least six by fishing gear
entanglement. In addition, there were 61 confirmed reports of whales
carrying fish gear, with about half of those whales able to shed the
gear or were disentangled by humans.
Study co-authors Hal Caswell and Michael Moore of the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)
emphasize the consequences for the population. “The bottom line is that human induced right whale mortality is
currently exceeding a level that allows the population to grow,” said
Michael Moore, a veterinarian and research scientist. “ It is
fulfilling the prediction made by Hal Caswell and Masami Fujiwara that
if this level of mortality continues, the likelihood of the species
having a sustainable future is very low.”
Fujiwara, a co-author on this study, was a student in the MIT/WHOI
Joint Graduate Program in Oceanography and Applied Ocean Sciences and
Engineering and is now at the University of California, Santa
Barbara. In addition to the WHOI scientists, the recent study included scientists
from Cornell University, University of Rhode Island, Provincetown
Center for Coastal Studies, University of North Carolina at Wilmington,
Florida State University, and Duke University Marine Laboratory.
An analysis of right whale population data by Caswell and his
collaborators Fujiwara and Christine Hunter shows that northern right
whales will probably become extinct within 200 years if the
environmental
conditions experienced by the whales in recent years continues. Data
show the female survival rate, especially for females that have just
given birth, is going down at an alarming rate.
Calf production has
increased recently, from an average of 12 calves per year prior to 2000
to between 16 and 31 calves per year from 2001 to 2005.
While this may seem like good news, it is insufficient to reverse the
population decline, let alone compensate for the recent increase in
deaths. Caswell and his co-authors report that the increased
reproductive output will increase population growth only about 1.6
percent per
year, not enough to save a population that has been declining about two
percent per year since
2000.
"The future of the right whale depends primarily on
reducing deaths from human activities, "Caswell says. “ Steps have been
taken to minimize risks to right whales, but more needs to be done.
If mortality continues at the levels of the past year, this population
will face extinction.”
"Because the population is so small, a single death represents a
significant mortality rate," Caswell, a senior scientist at the
Institution, says. "Preventing the deaths of just two females a year would make a huge difference. The
eight deaths reported in the past 16 months is almost three times the
average annual rate of mortality. If something isn’t done to turn this
around this species will no longer exist in the not too distant future.”
The Science study recommends that federal officials implement emergency
measures to reduce ship speeds and re-route commercial and military ships as
recommended in 2004, and eliminate or minimize the amount of fixed
fishing gear in the water column. Steps could include mandating changes
in the pot-fishing industry (lobsters, crab, etc.) that will reduce
gear in the water, requiring the use of different rope types to
minimize entanglements, developing and implementing fishing
methods that do not use vertical lines attached to surface buoys, and
streamlining the current process for right whale research and gear
modifications, which now takes years.
Right whales are distributed from the coast of northern Florida to the
Bay of Fundy, with females and calves most often seen in winter months
off the coast of Florida and Georgia, their only known calving ground.
That area is also close to shipping lanes where large vessel traffic
has increased since 1980. More than 60 percent of the North Atlantic
right whales have scars from entanglement in fishing gear, such as
lobster pots and sink gillnets. Cuts from ship strikes are also visible
on many whales.
WHOI has a major right whale initiative underway through its Ocean Life
Institute and is working with a number of research organizations and
institutions on ways to reduce right whale mortality.
Originally published: July 22, 2005

