Investigating the role of prey depletion in cetacean distributions and population dynamics

Abstract

34th European Cetacean Society Conference, O Grove, 16-20 April 2023A key driver in determining the distribution and demography of cetaceans is the dispersion of their prey, in terms of availability, abundance and quality. A Working Group on Resource Depletion has been established within ASCOBANS to review current knowledge and develop recommendations for research and action. It includes members with expertise in veterinary and fishery science, cetacean biology, ecology and conservation. The group has eight terms of reference - reviewing and collating recent information on resource depletion and its impacts, prey distribution and abundance, health and condition indicators, small cetacean diet, spatio-temporal trends in small cetacean species, emerging technologies, integrating information from multiple data sources, and making recommendations for possible mitigation measures to aid conservation. As a first step, the group has summarised information on the diets of all small cetacean species regularly occurring in the ASCOBANS Agreement Area, and explored the parameters required to assess cetacean health and condition at both an individual and population level. The need to better understand prey choice in terms of prey availability and caloric content is highlighted along with the development of indicators of food shortage through necropsies of dead animals and photographic assessments of body condition in live animals. Future research, monitoring and conservation needs include refining the definition of prey depletion, developing prey depletion reference points, and articulating associated conservation objectives. We also need a better understanding of the relationships between cetacean physiology, energetics, body condition, health and diet, and of the population and ecosystem level consequences of prey depletion (e.g. based on the use of ecosystem models). Improved monitoring of prey and cetacean distribution and abundance at relevant spatiotemporal scales would facilitate estimation and mapping of resource depletion riskN

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