Journal
DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS
Volume 143, Issue -, Pages 205-226Publisher
INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/dao03578
Keywords
Right whale; Health; Trauma; Reproduction; Stressor; Cumulative effects
Categories
Funding
- [NA14OAR4320158]
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Whaling activities have severely affected North Atlantic right whales and Southern right whales, with a need to expand measures to reduce trauma. Further research is necessary to evaluate the impact of other stressors on the reproductive success and health of right whales, and the development of new health assessment tools is essential to monitor the effectiveness of management measures.
Whaling has decimated North Atlantic right whales Eubalaena glacialis (NARW) since the 11th century and southern right whales E. australis (SRW) since the 19th century. Today, NARWs are Critically Endangered and decreasing, whereas SRWs are recovering. We review NARW health assessment literature, NARW Consortium databases, and efforts and limitations to monitor individual and species health, survival, and fecundity. Photographs are used to track individual movement and external signs of health such as evidence of vessel and entanglement trauma. Post-mortem examinations establish cause of death and determine organ pathology. Photogrammetry is used to assess growth rates and body condition. Samples of blow, skin, blubber, baleen and feces quantify hormones that provide information on stress, reproduction, and nutrition, identify microbiome changes, and assess evidence of infection. We also discuss models of the population consequences of multiple stressors, including the connection between human activities (e.g. entanglement) and health. Lethal and sublethal vessel and entanglement trauma have been identified as major threats to the species. There is a clear and immediate need for expanding trauma reduction measures. Beyond these major concerns, further study is needed to evaluate the impact of other stressors, such as pathogens, microbiome changes, and algal and industrial toxins, on NARW reproductive success and health. Current and new health assessment tools should be developed and used to monitor the effectiveness of management measures and will help determine whether they are sufficient for a substantive species recovery.Y
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