Date: January 16, 2019
Source: PLOS
More than
three-quarters of marine mammal and sea turtle populations have significantly
increased after listing of the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA), according to
a study published January 16 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by
Abel Valdivia of the Center for Biological Diversity in California, and
colleagues. The findings suggest that conservation measures such as tailored
species management and fishery regulations, in addition to other national and
international measures, appear to have been largely successful in promoting
species recovery, leading to the delisting of some species and to increases in
most populations.
The ESA
is a powerful environmental law protecting imperiled plants and animals, and a
growing number of marine species have been protected under this law as
extinction risk in the oceans has increased. Yet analyses of recovery trends
for marine mammals and sea turtles after listing are lacking. To address this
gap in knowledge, Valdivia and colleagues gathered the best available annual
abundance estimates for populations of all 62 marine mammal species and sea
turtle species listed under the ESA. The researchers analyzed population
trends, the magnitude of population change, and recovery status for 23
representative populations of 14 marine mammal species and eight representative
populations of five sea turtle species.
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