Managed and unmanaged whale mortality in the California Current Ecosystem

Whales serve important biological and cultural functions in the California Current ecosystem (CCE). Due to concerns regarding anthropogenic impacts on whales, the California Ocean Protection Council articulated a goal to achieve zero mortality for CCE whales, with a target of creating a statewide pl...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine policy Vol. 140; p. 105039
Main Authors: Oldach, Eliza, Killeen, Helen, Shukla, Priya, Brauer, Ellie, Carter, Nicholas, Fields, Jennifer, Thomsen, Alexandra, Cooper, Cassidy, Mellinger, Leah, Wang, Kaiwen, Hendrickson, Carl, Neumann, Anna, Bøving, Pernille Sporon, Fangue, Nann
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 01-06-2022
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Whales serve important biological and cultural functions in the California Current ecosystem (CCE). Due to concerns regarding anthropogenic impacts on whales, the California Ocean Protection Council articulated a goal to achieve zero mortality for CCE whales, with a target of creating a statewide plan by 2022. Achieving zero mortality is a laudable but difficult goal as success depends on understanding the existing sources of mortality, the opportunities for policy change, and coordination of activities across the entire CCE. This review synthesizes the available research on drivers of mortality for nine whale species in the CCE and existing policy that addresses those drivers. Five main threats contribute to whale mortality in the CCE and are currently targeted through relevant policy responses: entanglement, vessel strikes, noise, water quality, and marine debris. Three threats remain largely unaddressed in management, despite their contribution to lethal and sublethal impacts on whales: nutritional stress, disease, and predation. Ultimately, sources of whale mortality are interconnected and their impacts span both geographic and jurisdictional boundaries, necessitating a holistic approach to managing whale mortality in the CCE. •This review synthesizes the biology and policy of whale mortality on the U.S. West Coast.•Whale mortality results from direct and indirect stressors, which overlap to increase mortality risk in unpredictable ways.•Policies to address whale mortality focus on individual sources of mortality, rather than multiple, interacting sources.•Effective whale mortality policies should address overlapping mortality sources rather than single stressors.
ISSN:0308-597X
1872-9460
DOI:10.1016/j.marpol.2022.105039