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First Direct Evidence for Natal Wintering Ground Fidelity and Estimate of Juvenile Survival in the New Zealand Southern Right Whale Eubalaena australis Público Deposited

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https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/concern/articles/cc08hh33g

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  • Juvenile survival and recruitment can be more sensitive to environmental, ecological and anthropogenic factors than adult survival, influencing population-level processes like recruitment and growth rate in long-lived, iteroparous species such as southern right whales. Conventionally, Southern right whales are individually identified using callosity patterns, which do not stabilise until 6–12 months, by which time the whale has left its natal wintering grounds. Here we use DNA profiling of skin biopsy samples to identify individual Southern right whales from year of birth and document their return to the species’ primary wintering ground in New Zealand waters, the Subantarctic Auckland Islands. We find evidence of natal fidelity to the New Zealand wintering ground by the recapture of 15 of 57 whales, first sampled in year of birth and available for subsequent recapture, during winter surveys to the Auckland Islands in 1995–1998 and 2006–2009. Four individuals were recaptured at the ages of 9 to 11, including two females first sampled as calves in 1998 and subsequently resampled as cows with calves in 2007. Using these capture-recapture records of known-age individuals, we estimate changes in survival with age using Cormack-Jolly-Seber models. Survival is modelled using discrete age classes and as a continuous function of age. Using a bootstrap method to account for uncertainty in model selection and fitting, we provide the first direct estimate of juvenile survival for this population. Our analyses indicate a high annual apparent survival for juveniles at between 0.87 (standard error (SE) 0.17, to age 1) and 0.95 (SE 0.05: ages 2–8). Individual identification by DNA profiling is an effective method for long-term demographic and genetic monitoring, particularly in animals that change identifiable features as they develop or experience tag loss over time.
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  • Carroll, E. L., Fewster, R. M., Childerhouse, S. J., Patenaude, N. J., Boren, L., & Baker, C. S. (2016). First Direct Evidence for Natal Wintering Ground Fidelity and Estimate of Juvenile Survival in the New Zealand Southern Right Whale Eubalaena australis. PLoS ONE, 11(1), e0146590. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0146590
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  • 11
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  • 1
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  • The 1995-1998 Auckland Islands field trips were funded by the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, the U.S. Department of State (Program for Cooperative US/New Zealand Antarctic Research), the Auckland University Research Council, and the New Zealand Marsden Fund. The 2006-2009 field seasons were funded by a Winifred Violet Scott Estate Research Grant Fund, the Australian Antarctic Division, the Marine Conservation Action Fund, Blue Planet Marine New Zealand Ltd, Holsworth Wildlife Research endowment, New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs, New Zealand Department of Conservation (DOC), South Pacific Whale Research Consortium, the National Geographic Society, and Brian Skerry Photography. Lab work was funded by the New Zealand Marsden Fund, DOC, and the Heseltine Trust. E. Carroll was supported by a Tertiary Education Commission Top Achiever Scholarship, an OMV New Zealand Ltd Scholarship and the School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland. The funder Blue Planet Marine provided support in the form of salary for authors SJC, but did not have any additional role in the study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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