Modelling impacts of long-line fishing: what are the effects of pair-bond disruption and sex-biased mortality on albatross fecundity?
Authored by MSL Mills, PG Ryan
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1017/s1367943005002386
Sponsors:
South African National Antarctic Programme (SANAP)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Long-line fishing mortality poses a significant threat to many large
procellariiform seabirds. To date, estimates of impacts have
concentrated on lower survival rates, largely ignoring the costs to
fecundity resulting from disruption of breeding pairs and skews in sex
ratio. A comparative, stochastic, individual-based model was used to
investigate these costs for the wandering albatross Diomedea exulans.
Ignoring the time taken to replace a lost mate overestimates fecundity
by 13-18\%, resulting in annual population growth rates (lambda) being
0.006-0.007 too high. Long-line mortality exacerbates this cost, which
becomes more substantial with increasing demographic skew resulting from
female-biased mortality. At moderate levels of long-line mortality
(2-4\% per year), 80\% female-biased mortality reduces fecundity by
9-27\% and lambda by 0.003-0.010 relative to models with random
mortality. Biased sex ratios accumulate and, unlike reduced survival, their impacts on albatross demography persist after long-line mortality
ceases. Estimates of the demographic costs of long-line mortality should
incorporate individual-level effects, especially where mortality is
sex-biased.
Tags
fisheries
Population-dynamics
Survival
Age
South-georgia
Wandering albatross
Diomedea-exulans
Amsterdam
albatross
Seabird mortality
Crozet islands