Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/48247
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Type: Journal article
Title: Inferring population trends for the world's largest fish from mark-recapture estimates of survival
Author: Bradshaw, C.
Mollet, H.
Meekan, M.
Citation: Journal of Animal Ecology, 2007; 76(3):480-489
Publisher: Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Issue Date: 2007
ISSN: 0021-8790
1365-2656
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Henry F. Mollet And Mark G. Meekan
Abstract: # 1. Precise estimates of demographic rates are key components of population models used to predict the effects of stochastic environmental processes, harvest scenarios and extinction probability. # 2. We used a 12-year photographic identification library of whale sharks from Ningaloo Reef, Western Australia to construct Cormack–Jolly–Seber (CJS) model estimates of survival within a capture–mark–recapture (CMR) framework. Estimated survival rates, population structure and assumptions regarding age at maturity, longevity and reproduction frequency were combined in a series of age-classified Leslie matrices to infer the potential trajectory of the population. # 3. Using data from 111 individuals, there was evidence for time variation in apparent survival (φ) and recapture probability (p). The null model gave a @ of 0·825 (95% CI: 0·727–0·893) and = 0·184 (95% CI: 0·121–0·271). The model-averaged annual @ ranged from 0·737 to 0·890. There was little evidence for a sex effect on survival. # 4. Using standardized total length as a covariate in the CMR models indicated a size bias in φ. Ignoring the effects of time, a 5-m shark has a @ = 0·59 and a 9 m shark has @ = 0·81. # 5. Of the 16 model combinations considered, 10 (63%) indicated a decreasing population (λ < 1). For models based on age at first reproduction (α) of 13 years, the mean age of reproducing females at the stable age distribution (Ā) ranged from 15 to 23 years, which increased to 29–37 years when α was assumed to be 25. # 6. All model scenarios had higher total elasticities for non-reproductive female survival [E(snr)] compared to those for reproductive female survival [E(sr)]. # 7. Assuming relatively slow, but biologically realistic, vital rates (α = 25 and biennial reproduction) and size-biased survival probabilities, our results suggest that the Ningaloo Reef population of whale sharks is declining, although more reproductive data are clearly needed to confirm this conclusion. Combining relatively precise survival estimates from CMR studies with realistic assumptions of other vital rates provides a useful heuristic framework for determining the vulnerability of large oceanic predators for which few direct data exist.
Keywords: Australia
demography
Leslie matrix model
mark–recapture
Ningaloo Reef
Rhincodon typus
survival
vital rates
whale shark
Description: © British Ecological Society
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2006.01201.x
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2656.2006.01201.x
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest
Earth and Environmental Sciences publications
Environment Institute Leaders publications

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