Publikation: Long-term decline in survival and reproduction of dolphins following a marine heatwave
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One of many challenges in the conservation of biodiversity is the recent trend in the frequency and intensity of extreme climatic events [1]. The Shark Bay World Heritage Area, Western Australia, endured an unprecedented marine heatwave in 2011. Catastrophic losses of habitat-forming seagrass meadows followed [2], along with mass mortalities of invertebrate and fish communities [3]. Our long-term demographic data on Shark Bay's resident Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin (Tursiops aduncus) population revealed a significant decline in female reproductive rates following the heatwave. Moreover, capture-recapture analyses indicated 5.9% and 12.2% post-heatwave declines in the survival of dolphins that use tools to forage and those that do not, respectively. This implies that the tool-using dolphins may have been somewhat buffered against the cascading effects of habitat loss following the heatwave by having access to a less severely affected foraging niche [4]. Overall, however, lower survival has persisted post-heatwave, suggesting that habitat loss following extreme weather events may have prolonged, negative impacts on even behaviourally flexible, higher-trophic level predators.
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WILD, Sonja, Michael KRÜTZEN, Robert W. RANKIN, William J. E. HOPPITT, Livia GERBER, Simon J. ALLEN, 2019. Long-term decline in survival and reproduction of dolphins following a marine heatwave. In: Current Biology. Cell Press. 2019, 29(7), pp. R239-R240. ISSN 0960-9822. eISSN 1879-0445. Available under: doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.02.047BibTex
@article{Wild2019Longt-50953, year={2019}, doi={10.1016/j.cub.2019.02.047}, title={Long-term decline in survival and reproduction of dolphins following a marine heatwave}, number={7}, volume={29}, issn={0960-9822}, journal={Current Biology}, pages={R239--R240}, author={Wild, Sonja and Krützen, Michael and Rankin, Robert W. and Hoppitt, William J. E. and Gerber, Livia and Allen, Simon J.} }
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