| Literature DB >> 23028446 |
Tero Harkonen1, Karin C Harding, Susan Wilson, Mirgaliy Baimukanov, Lilia Dmitrieva, Carl Johan Svensson, Simon J Goodman.
Abstract
Understanding historical roles of species in ecosystems can be crucial for assessing long term human impacts on environments, providing context for management or restoration objectives, and making conservation evaluations of species status. In most cases limited historical abundance data impedes quantitative investigations, but harvested species may have long-term data accessible from hunting records. Here we make use of annual hunting records for Caspian seals (Pusa caspica) dating back to the mid-19(th) century, and current census data from aerial surveys, to reconstruct historical abundance using a hind-casting model. We estimate the minimum numbers of seals in 1867 to have been 1-1.6 million, but the population declined by at least 90% to around 100,000 individuals by 2005, primarily due to unsustainable hunting throughout the 20(th) century. This collapse is part of a broader picture of catastrophic ecological change in the Caspian over the 20(th) Century. Our results combined with fisheries data show that the current biomass of top predators in the Caspian is much reduced compared to historical conditions. The potential for the Caspian and other similar perturbed ecosystems to sustain natural resources of much greater biological and economic value than at present depends on the extent to which a number of anthropogenic impacts can be harnessed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23028446 PMCID: PMC3446954 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Total registered harvest of Caspian seals (solid line) and the number of pups (dashed line) for the period 1867–2005.
Based on published hunting records [14], [15], [16]. Data for recent years are derived from Russian Federal Fisheries Agency reports [29], [30].
Figure 2Estimated minimum total female population size (solid line) and the number adult females (dashed line) in the Caspian for the period 1867–2005 as based on historical hunting records ( ).
The hunt during the 1960s led to a rapid decline in population size.
Figure 3The population growth rate of the Caspian seal population from 1867 to 2006 has fluctuated significantly because of the variable hunting pressure.
Figure 4Temporal changes in age structure before pupping of the Caspian seal population.
The skewed age structure is mainly due to hunting mortality and, sterility in the 1960s and 1970s. Adults = solid line, sub-adults = dashed line, yearlings = solid grey line.
Vital rates for Caspian seals during the periods 1930–1964 and 1965–2005.
| Variable | Description | 1867–1964 | 1965–2006 |
|
| Adult fertility | 0.94/2 | 0.7/2 |
|
| Pup survival | 0.54–0.67–0.80 | 0.36–0.45–0-54 |
|
| Sub-adult survival | 0.90 | 0.90 |
|
| Adult survival | 0.97 | 0.97 |
|
| Age at sexual maturity | 5 | 5 |
Three pup survival rates, i.e. 0.8p p, p p, or 1.2p p, are used to attain a realistic span for population size in 1867.