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The world's smallest whale population?
Authors:Paul R Wade  Amy Kennedy  Rick LeDuc  Jay Barlow  Jim Carretta  Kim Shelden  Wayne Perryman  Robert Pitman  Kelly Robertson  Brenda Rone  Juan Carlos Salinas  Alexandre Zerbini  Robert L Brownell  Jr  Phillip J Clapham
Institution:1.Alaska Fisheries Science Center, 7600 Sand Point Way Northeast, Seattle, WA 98115, USA;2.Southwest Fisheries Science Center, 3333 North Torrey Pines Court, La Jolla, CA 92037, USA;3.Southwest Fisheries Science Center, 1352 Lighthouse Avenue, Pacific Grove, CA 93950, USA
Abstract:The North Pacific right whale (Eubalaena japonica) was heavily exploited by both nineteenth century whaling and recent (1960s) illegal Soviet catches. Today, the species remains extremely rare especially in the eastern North Pacific. Here, we use photographic and genotype data to calculate the first mark–recapture estimates of abundance for right whales in the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands. The estimates were very similar: photographic = 31 (95% CL 23–54), genotyping = 28 (95% CL 24–42). We also estimated the population contains eight females (95% CL 7–18) and 20 males (95% CL 17–37). Although these estimates may relate to a Bering Sea subpopulation, other data suggest that the total eastern North Pacific population is unlikely to be much larger. Its precarious status today—the world''s smallest whale population for which an abundance estimate exists—is a direct consequence of uncontrolled and illegal whaling, and highlights the past failure of international management to prevent such abuses.
Keywords:North Pacific  right whale  Eubalaena japonica  abundance  mark–  recapture  Bering Sea
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