Bio-energetic modeling of medium-sized cetaceans shows high sensitivity to disturbance in seasons of low resource supply.

Ecol Appl

Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, 1090 GE, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Published: July 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding human impact on wildlife requires a framework to measure how disturbances affect wildlife populations, specifically through the Population Consequences of Disturbance (PCoD) model that links individual behavior to population outcomes.
  • Bio-energetic models, which incorporate individual behavior and environmental conditions, are used to predict how disturbances influence survival, growth, and reproduction across an organism's life cycle.
  • The study presents a model for long-finned pilot whales, indicating that the severity of disturbance impacts calf survival and female fitness, and emphasizes that whales fare better during disturbances when resources are plentiful as compared to when resources are scarce.

Article Abstract

Understanding the full scope of human impact on wildlife populations requires a framework to assess the population-level repercussions of nonlethal disturbance. The Population Consequences of Disturbance (PCoD) framework provides such an approach, by linking the effects of disturbance on the behavior and physiology of individuals to their population-level consequences. Bio-energetic models have been used as implementations of PCoD, as these integrate the behavioral and physiological state of an individual with the state of the environment, to mediate between disturbance and biological significant changes in vital rates (survival, growth, and reproduction). To assess which levels of disturbance lead to adverse effects on population growth rate requires a bio-energetic model that covers the complete life cycle of the organism under study. In a density-independent setting, the expected lifetime reproductive output of a single female can then be used to predict the level of disturbance that leads to population decline. Here, we present such a model for a medium-sized cetacean, the long-finned pilot whale (Globicephala melas). Disturbance is modeled as a yearly recurrent period of no resource feeding for the pilot whale female and her calf. Short periods of disturbance lead to the pre-weaned death of the first one or more calves of the young female. Higher disturbance levels also affect survival of calves produced later in the life of the female, in addition to degrading female survival. The level of disturbance that leads to a negative population growth rate strongly depends on the available resources in the environment. This has important repercussion for the timing of disturbance if resource availability fluctuates seasonally. The model predicts that pilot whales can tolerate on average three times longer periods of disturbance in seasons of high resource availability, compared to disturbance happening when resources are low. Although our model is specifically parameterized for pilot whales, it provides useful insights into the general consequences of nonlethal disturbance. If appropriate data on life history and energetics are available, it can be used to provide management advice for specific species or populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6618318PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/eap.1903DOI Listing

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