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The effect of prey abundance and fisheries on the survival, reproduction, and social structure of killer whales (Orcinus orca) at subantarctic Marion Island

The effect of prey abundance and fisheries on the survival, reproduction, and social structure of killer whales (Orcinus orca) at subantarctic Marion Island
The effect of prey abundance and fisheries on the survival, reproduction, and social structure of killer whales (Orcinus orca) at subantarctic Marion Island
Most marine apex predators are keystone species that fundamentally influence their ecosystems through cascading top-down processes. Reductions in worldwide predator abundances, attributed to environmental- and anthropogenic-induced changes to prey availability and negative interactions with fisheries, can have far-reaching ecosystem impacts. We tested whether the survival of killer whales (Orcinus orca) observed at Marion Island in the Southern Indian Ocean correlated with social structure and prey variables (direct measures of prey abundance, Patagonian toothfish fishery effort, and environmental proxies) using multistate models of capture–recapture data spanning 12 years (2006–2018). We also tested the effect of these same variables on killer whale social structure and reproduction measured over the same period. Indices of social structure had the strongest correlation with survival, with higher sociality associated with increased survival probability. Survival was also positively correlated with Patagonian toothfish fishing effort during the previous year, suggesting that fishery-linked resource availability is an important determinant of survival. No correlation between survival and environmental proxies of prey abundance was found. At-island prey availability influenced the social structure of Marion Island killer whales, but none of the variables explained variability in reproduction. Future increases in legal fishing activity may benefit this population of killer whales through the artificial provisioning of resources they provide.
apex predator, environment, fishery, marine, population, threat
2045-7758
Jordaan, Rowan K.
4d8c99fa-ad76-4da5-a9f3-f9dd8a634ae4
Oosthuizen, W. Chris
1b94648f-2c36-4d46-bc75-ca5b394a3f98
Reisinger, Ryan R.
4eaf9440-48e5-41fa-853f-d46457e5444e
de Bruyn, P.J.Nico
3257867f-eda3-4ddf-baa3-aaf692de19bb
Jordaan, Rowan K.
4d8c99fa-ad76-4da5-a9f3-f9dd8a634ae4
Oosthuizen, W. Chris
1b94648f-2c36-4d46-bc75-ca5b394a3f98
Reisinger, Ryan R.
4eaf9440-48e5-41fa-853f-d46457e5444e
de Bruyn, P.J.Nico
3257867f-eda3-4ddf-baa3-aaf692de19bb

Jordaan, Rowan K., Oosthuizen, W. Chris, Reisinger, Ryan R. and de Bruyn, P.J.Nico (2023) The effect of prey abundance and fisheries on the survival, reproduction, and social structure of killer whales (Orcinus orca) at subantarctic Marion Island. Ecology and Evolution, 13 (6), [e10144]. (doi:10.1002/ece3.10144).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Most marine apex predators are keystone species that fundamentally influence their ecosystems through cascading top-down processes. Reductions in worldwide predator abundances, attributed to environmental- and anthropogenic-induced changes to prey availability and negative interactions with fisheries, can have far-reaching ecosystem impacts. We tested whether the survival of killer whales (Orcinus orca) observed at Marion Island in the Southern Indian Ocean correlated with social structure and prey variables (direct measures of prey abundance, Patagonian toothfish fishery effort, and environmental proxies) using multistate models of capture–recapture data spanning 12 years (2006–2018). We also tested the effect of these same variables on killer whale social structure and reproduction measured over the same period. Indices of social structure had the strongest correlation with survival, with higher sociality associated with increased survival probability. Survival was also positively correlated with Patagonian toothfish fishing effort during the previous year, suggesting that fishery-linked resource availability is an important determinant of survival. No correlation between survival and environmental proxies of prey abundance was found. At-island prey availability influenced the social structure of Marion Island killer whales, but none of the variables explained variability in reproduction. Future increases in legal fishing activity may benefit this population of killer whales through the artificial provisioning of resources they provide.

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Ecology and Evolution - 2023 - Jordaan - The effect of prey abundance and fisheries on the survival reproduction and - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 May 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 June 2023
Published date: 4 June 2023
Keywords: apex predator, environment, fishery, marine, population, threat

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493753
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493753
ISSN: 2045-7758
PURE UUID: 63ebf50a-e095-4ed1-a412-6bb821d71b10
ORCID for Ryan R. Reisinger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8933-6875

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Date deposited: 12 Sep 2024 16:33
Last modified: 13 Sep 2024 02:04

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Contributors

Author: Rowan K. Jordaan
Author: W. Chris Oosthuizen
Author: P.J.Nico de Bruyn

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