| Literature DB >> 30564522 |
Monika W Shields1, Sara Hysong-Shimazu1, Jason C Shields1, Julie Woodruff1.
Abstract
The inland waters of Washington State and southern British Columbia, collectively known as the Salish Sea, comprise key habitat for two regional populations of killer whales (Orcinus orca): the mammal-eating West Coast Transients and the endangered fish-eating Southern Residents. These two populations are genetically distinct and may avoid each other. Transient killer whale usage of the Salish Sea has been previously assessed over two seven-year time periods, showing an increase from 1987 to 2010. We documented a continued significant increase in mammal-eating killer whale presence in the Salish Sea from 2011 to 2017, with intra- and inter-annual variability and with record sightings in 2017. This continued increase, likely in response to abundant marine mammal prey, is related to both a growing population and an increase in the number of West Coast Transients visiting the area. Additionally, a negative binomial regression shows that absence of Southern Residents is correlated to transient presence. Finally, both populations of killer whales have been linked to regional harbor seal populations; harbor seals are salmonid-eating competitors of the Southern Residents and are prey for the mammal-eating transients. With Southern Residents listed as endangered, culling harbor seals has been proposed as a measure to help in their recovery. With this in mind, we developed an energetic model to assess the minimum number of harbor seals consumed by transient killer whales. Using the actual number of whales present in each age-sex class for each day of the year, we estimate that, at a minimum, transients in the Salish Sea consumed 1090 seals in 2017. This is more than 2% of the 2014 estimated harbor seal population the Salish Sea. The population controlling effects of transient killer whale predation on harbor seals should be considered when evaluating any pinniped management actions in the Salish Sea.Entities:
Keywords: Habitat usage; Harbor seals; Killer whales; Population growth; Predator management; Predator-prey dynamics; Salish Sea
Year: 2018 PMID: 30564522 PMCID: PMC6284519 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.6062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Map of the Salish Sea.
The transboundary inland waters of Washington state, USA and British Columbia, Canada are known as the Salish Sea. The shaded region defines the area where killer whale presence was noted for this study.
Parameters of killer whale prey species.
The top four West Coast Transient prey species with values used in the energetic model, including a range for average mass in kilograms, energetic content in kcal/kg, and estimated proportion of killer whale diet.
| Prey species | Average mass in kg | Energetic content in kcal/kg | Portion of West Coast Transient prey items |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harbor seal ( | 65–150 | 3,550 | 0.69 |
| Harbor porpoise ( | 55–70 | 4,730 | 0.13 |
| Dall’s porpoise ( | 170–200 | 4,730 | 0.06 |
| Steller sea lion ( | 420–700 | 2,500 | 0.12 |
Notes.
Range, based on Ford (2017), Hoelzel, 2002, Stewart & Clapham (2002) Stewart & Clapham (2002), and WDFW (2012).
Perez (1990).
Based on combined data from Baird & Dill (1995) and Ford et al. (2013).
West Coast Transient killer whale mass by age-sex class.
Definitions of age-sex classes used in the energetic model with range of masses used in kilograms.
| Age-sex class | Definition | Mass (range) |
|---|---|---|
| Immature | All individuals <15 years old | 1,500–2,000 kg |
| Adult female | Females or unknown sex ≥ 15 years old | 3,000–4,000 kg |
| Adult male | Males ≥ 15 years old | 4,000–8,000 kg |
Notes.
Ranges are based on values reported by Baird & Dill (1995), Ford (2017), and Williams et al. (2004).
Transient killer whale “occurrences” across three seven-year time periods.
A comparison of occurrences of transient killer whales from 2011–2017 with two previously published seven-year time periods. In addition to the cumulative number of occurrences, number of matrilines, approximate number of total individuals, successful births among whales using the Salish Sea (defined as whales born during the time period that were still alive at the end of the time period), and modal and mean group sizes are also presented.
| # of Occurrences | # of Matrilines | Approximate # of individuals | Successful births among Salish Sea matrilines | Modal group size | Mean minimum group size (±SD, range) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1987–1993 ( | 97 | 12 | 40 | 4 | 3 | 4.40 (2.82, 1–15) |
| 2004–2010 ( | 372 | 28 | 135 | 31 | 4 | 5.12 (4.36, 1–36) |
| 2011–2017 | 854 | 52 (+18 lone whales) | 240 | 51 | 4 | 6.10 (4.45, 1–32) |
Figure 2Average number of transient killer whale occurrences by month across three time periods.
Historically, transient killer whale occurrences in the Salish Sea peaked in August. By the 2000s, usage of the Salish Sea included a second peak in April–May. By the present time period of 2001–2017, transients were more abundant throughout the entire year, particularly for all the months from April–September. 2017 was a record year for occurrences. 1987–1993 data from Baird & Dill, 1995; 2004–2010 data from Houghton et al. (2015).
Figure 3Number of days Southern Resident (SRKW) and transient (WCT) killer whales were present in the Salish Sea in the months of April through September for 2002 through 2017.
The Salish Sea has been identified as the core critical habitat for the endangered Southern Resident killer whales in both the United States and Canada, but their usage of the Salish Sea during the months of April–September has declined over the last 16 years. Concurrently, transient killer whale usage of the Salish Sea has increased. Data on presence/absence of both species is from public reports from knowledgeable observers to the Orca Network sightings database. While both these trends are linked at least in part to prey abundance of the respective killer whale populations, the two populations are also known to avoid each other, and transient killer whale presence is correlated to Southern Resident killer whale absence.
Figure 4Estimated harbor seal consumption by West Coast Transient (WCT) killer whales in the Salish Sea in 2017.
Black line is the mean estimate of cumulative seals eaten (left axis) through that day of the year from our Monte Carlo bioenergetic model, based on actual transient killer whale presence as reported by the Pacific Whale Watch Association. Dashed lines represent 95% confidence intervals. Gray bars are the number of WCT killer whales confirmed in inland waters on each day (right axis).