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Journal ArticleDOI

First evidence that marine protected areas can work for marine mammals

TLDR
In this article, the authors assess the effectiveness of marine protected areas (MPAs) in improving the survival rate of Hector's dolphin Cephalorhynchus hectori at Banks Peninsula.
Abstract
Summary 1. Marine protected areas (MPAs) have been advocated for the protection of threatened marine mammals, but there is no empirical evidence that they are effective. In 1988, the Banks Peninsula Marine Mammal Sanctuary was established to reduce gillnet mortalities of Hector’s dolphin Cephalorhynchus hectori, an endangered dolphin species endemic to New Zealand. This study assesses the effectiveness of the MPA in improving the survival rate of Hector’s dolphin at Banks Peninsula. 2. Over 21 years, we undertook photo-identification surveys of Hector’s dolphins along standardized transects from small outboard-powered boats. From 1986 to 2006, we photographically captured 462 reliably marked individuals. We estimated mean annual survival during the pre-sanctuary and post-sanctuary periods by applying a Bayesian random effects capture-recapture model to the data. Population growth was estimated from population simulations using a stage-structured matrix model. 3. We estimate a 90% probability that survival has improved between the pre-sanctuary and postsanctuary periods, with estimates of mean survival probability increasing by 5AE4% (from 0AE863 to 0AE917). This improvement in survival corresponds to a 6% increase in mean annual population growth (from 0AE939 to 0AE995). 4. Synthesis and applications. Our study demonstrates improvement in a demographic parameter of an endangered marine mammal species following conservation action. Our results provide evidence that area-based protection measures can be effective for marine mammals. We note that estimating demographic parameters in marine mammals requires many years of data to achieve sufficient precision to detect biologically meaningful change. MPAs should be established with a commitment to long-term monitoring.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Marine mammal bycatch in gillnet and other entangling net fisheries, 1990 to 2011

TL;DR: How little is known about marine mammal bycatch in gillnets in much of the world is revealed, revealing a critical issue demanding urgent attention if there is to be any hope of preventing further losses of marine mammal diversity and abundance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitigating unaccounted fishing mortality from gillnets and traps

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed relevant research efforts, locating 130 studies in the primary literature that concomitantly quantified mortalities and their resolution through technical modifications, with the division of effort indicating ongoing concerns.
Journal ArticleDOI

The MPA Guide: A framework to achieve global goals for the ocean

Kirsten Grorud-Colvert, +59 more
- 10 Sep 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe MPAs as conservation tools intended to protect biodiversity, promote healthy and resilient marine ecosystems, and provide societal benefits, despite codification of MPAs.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

General methods for monitoring convergence of iterative simulations

TL;DR: This work generalizes the method proposed by Gelman and Rubin (1992a) for monitoring the convergence of iterative simulations by comparing between and within variances of multiple chains, in order to obtain a family of tests for convergence.
Book

Matrix population models : construction, analysis, and interpretation

Hal Caswell
TL;DR: In this article, the age-classified matrix model was used to analyze the life-cycle graph sensitivity analysis and evolutionary demography statistical inference time-varying and stochastic models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Explicit estimates from capture-recapture data with both death and immigration-stochastic model.

G. M. Jolly
- 01 Jun 1965 - 
TL;DR: The first purpose of the present paper is to derive a general probability distribution designed to fit the majority of capture-recapture problems involving a 'single' population.
Journal ArticleDOI

A note on the multiple-recapture census.

G. A. F. Seber
- 01 Jun 1965 - 
TL;DR: Jolly (1965), tackling this problem from a different viewpoint, gives a very elegant solution to the problem of finding maximumlikelihood estimates of the unknown population parameters and gives the means and variances of these estimates.
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