Date: April 1, 2019
Source: University of Zurich
An
unprecedented marine heatwave had long-lasting negative impacts on both
survival and birth rates on the iconic dolphin population in Shark Bay, Western
Australia. Researchers at UZH have now documented that climate change may have
more far-reaching consequences for the conservation of marine mammals than
previously thought.
Shark Bay in
Western Australia in early 2011: A heatwave causes the water temperatures to
rise to more than four degrees above the annual average. The extended period
caused a substantial loss of seagrass, which drives the Shark Bay ecosystem, in
this coastal area, a UNESCO world heritage site.
Researchers
from UZH have now investigated how this environmental damage has affected
survival and reproduction of dolphins. They used long-term data on hundreds of
animals collected over a ten-year period from 2007 to 2017. Their analyses
revealed that the dolphins' survival rate had fallen by 12 percent following
the heatwave of 2011. Moreover, female dolphins were giving birth to fewer
calves -- a phenomenon that lasted at least until 2017.
Negative
influence of the heatwave is unprecedented
"The
extent of the negative influence of the heatwave surprised us," says Sonja
Wild, former PhD candidate at the University of Leeds and first author of the
study. "It is particularly unusual that the reproductive success of
females appears to have not returned to normal levels, even after six
years." There are several possible explanations for this phenomenon, for
instance neglect of calves, increased newborn mortality, delayed sexual
maturity or a combination thereof, but researchers have not yet been able to
investigate them in detail.
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