4.7 Article

Overlap between bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus) and vessel traffic in the North American Arctic and implications for conservation and management

Journal

BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
Volume 276, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2022.109820

Keywords

Automatic identification system; Bering -Chukchi -Beaufort; Cetacean; Conservation; Eastern Canada -West Greenland; Ship strikes; Vessel strikes

Funding

  1. U.S. Office of Naval Research [N00014-16-1-3019]
  2. Fisheries Joint Management Committee
  3. Ecosystem Research Initiative (DFO)
  4. Species at Risk Recovery Strategy (DFO) under the Species at Risk Act
  5. Panel for Energy Research and Development
  6. Nunavut Implementation Fund
  7. U.S. Minerals Management Service (now the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM)
  8. Nunavut Wildlife Management Board, Polar Continental Shelf Program
  9. DFO
  10. Government of Nunavut Fisheries and Sealing, Nunavut Wildlife Research Trust Fund, Nunavut General Monitoring Program, Ocean Tracking Network
  11. Canada Nature Fund for Aquatic Species at Risk (DFO)
  12. ArcticNet
  13. vessel strike risk
  14. BOEM
  15. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  16. Commission for Scientific Research in Greenland
  17. National Ocean Partnership Program
  18. Greenland Institute of Natural Resources
  19. MEOPAR through an agreement with exactEarth
  20. [M05PC0020]
  21. [M10PC00085]
  22. [M12PC00005]

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This study examined the hypothetical vessel strike risk for bowhead whales in the Arctic, identifying areas with the highest risk in different regions and seasons. The results provide important information for focused monitoring and minimizing/mitigating the threat of vessel strikes to bowhead whales.
Collisions between vehicles and wildlife is a global conservation concern, and vessel strikes are a leading cause of serious injury and mortality for baleen whales. Yet vessel strikes have rarely been studied in the Arctic. Vessel traffic is increasing throughout the Arctic as sea ice is declining, leading to increased overlap between vessels and whales. We examined hypothetical vessel strike risk for the Bering-Chukchi-Beaufort (BCB) and Eastern CanadaWest Greenland (ECWG) populations of bowhead whales during the open-water shipping season. We used satellite telemetry and aerial survey data to calculate monthly relative density of both populations, and satellite vessel tracking data to calculate monthly vessel density and speed. We estimated vessel strike risk by multiplying whale density by vessel density corrected by vessel speed. For the BCB population, the highest relative risk was near Utqiagvik and Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, USA, and near Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories, Canada. For the ECWG population, the highest risk was in the Gulf of Boothia, Cumberland Sound, and near Isabella Bay, Nunavut, Canada. Strike risk was highest in August and September, corresponding with monthly trends in vessel traffic. This study provides important information for focussed monitoring and to minimize/mitigate the threat of vessel strikes to bowhead whales. Although vessel strike risk is presently lower for these populations than for other temperate large cetacean populations, bowhead whale behaviour and projected increases in traffic elevates their risk in the Arctic. Measures to mitigate vessel strike risk to bowhead whales will likely benefit other Arctic marine mammals like beluga and narwhal.

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