| Literature DB >> 36255559 |
Lisa K Schwarz1, Glenn Gailey2, Olga Tyurneva3, Yuri Yakovlev3, Olga Sychenko2, Peter van der Wolf4, Vladimir V Vertyankin5.
Abstract
In the face of cumulative effects of oil and gas activities on the endangered western gray whale, informed management decisions rely on knowledge of gray whale spatial use patterns as a function of demographic group and prey energy. In particular, the gray whale foraging ground off Sakhalin Island consists of two distinct areas (nearshore and offshore) with the offshore feeding area exhibiting markedly high prey energy content. Based on photo-identification data collected from 2002 to 2015, we determined that gray whale use of the offshore feeding area increased with age. Pregnant females were more likely to be sighted only nearshore when nearshore prey energy and the proportion of nearshore energy from amphipods were higher. Likewise, females arriving with calves were less likely to be sighted offshore when the proportion of nearshore energy from amphipods was higher. Photo-identification effort in 2015 was increased substantially, with the intent of maximizing resighting data of individual whales to determine the relative proportion of different demographic groups utilizing the nearshore and offshore feeding areas. Comparing sighting data collected in 2015 with data from all previous years combined, mothers arriving with calves were sighted in the offshore feeding area earlier in 2015, with no evidence that they returned to forage nearshore later in the season. Other reproductive females constituted a higher proportion of the animals foraging nearshore prior to 2015, while juveniles were a higher proportion during 2015. Thus, the offshore feeding area is an important component of the gray whales' annual life cycle, particularly if nearshore prey energy continues to decline, and offshore anthropogenic activities need to be monitored and addressed.Entities:
Keywords: Eschrichtius robustus; Foraging; Habitat use; Photo-identification; Prey energy; Sea of Okhotsk
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36255559 PMCID: PMC9579093 DOI: 10.1007/s10661-022-10022-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Monit Assess ISSN: 0167-6369 Impact factor: 3.307