Vessel Strikes of Large Whales in the Eastern Tropical Pacific

Nicola Ransome*, Neil R. Loneragan, Luis Medrano-González, Fernando Félix, Joshua N. Smith

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Vessel strike is recognized as a major modern threat to the recovery of large whale populations globally, but the issue is notoriously difficult to assess. Vessel strikes by large ships frequently go unnoticed, and those involving smaller vessels are rarely reported. Interpreting global patterns of vessel strikes is further hindered by underlying reporting biases caused by differences in countries’ research efforts, legislation, reporting structures and enforcement. This leaves global strike data “patchy” and typically scarce outside of developed countries, where resources are more limited. To explore this we investigated vessel strikes with large whales in the Eastern Tropical Pacific (ETP), a coastal region of ten developing countries where heavy shipping and high cetacean densities overlap. Although this is characteristic of vessel strike “hotspots” worldwide, only 11 ETP strike reports from just four countries (∼2% of total reports) existed in the International Whaling Commission’s Global Ship Strike Database (2010). This contrasts greatly with abundant reports from the neighboring state of California (United States), and the greater United States/Canadian west coast, making it a compelling case study for investigating underreporting. By reviewing online media databases and articles, peer review publications and requesting information from government agencies, scientists, and tourism companies, we compiled a regional ETP vessel strike database. We found over three times as many strike reports (n = 40), from twice as many countries (n = 8), identifying the geographic extent and severity of the threat, although likely still underestimating the true number of strikes. Reports were found from 1905 until 2017, showing that strikes are a regional, historic, and present threat to large whales. The humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) was the most commonly hit species, and whale-watch industries involving small vessels in areas of high whale densities were recognized as a conservation and management concern. Industrial fishing fleets and shipping were suggested to be underrepresented sectors in the database, and are likely high-risk vessels for strikes with whales. We demonstrate the implications of known vessel strike reporting biases and conclude a more rapid assessment of global vessel strikes would substantially benefit from prioritized research efforts in developing regions, with known vessel strike “hotspot” characteristics, but few strike reports.

Original languageEnglish
JournalFrontiers in Marine Science
StatePublished - 6 Oct 2021

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright © 2021 Ransome, Loneragan, Medrano-González, Félix and Smith.

Funding

We would like to thank all the people that responded to our search, questions, and emails for information on vessel strikes in the Eastern Tropical Pacific. These include: from Mexico, firstly we would like to thank Astrid Frisch Jordán for her constant support, encouragement and advice, and for her dedication and commitment in addressing the problems of vessel strikes and other anthropogenic threats to large whales in the Mexican Pacific. We would also like to thank Katherina Audley, Eugenie Russell de Rodriguez, Jorge Urbán Ramírez, Christian Ortega Ortiz, Fernando Elorriaga Verplancken, Oscar Guzón, Aurora Paniagua, Sergio Martínez Aguilar, Diane Gendron Laniel, Gisela Heckel, Roberto Moncada Cooley, and all at the Comité de Varamientos de la SOMEMMA for their help, advice and encouragement; from Costa Rica, Javier Rodriguez of Fundación Promar for providing us with a concise record of vessel strikes, and Deivis Salazar Ruiz for kindly sharing information and images; from Peru, Aldo Pacheco for his advice and support and for providing us with information on vessel strikes; from Guatemala, María Laura Coronado Contreras, CONAP, for her quick correspondence, and information on vessel strikes; from Panama, Hector Guzmán for his support, kind words and advice; from Colombia, Laura Daniela Benítez Benítez, Fundación Yubarta, for advice and help on strikes with large whales; Marcel Vinicius for his advice and information on vessel strikes in Ecuador; Koen Van Waerebeek for information on strikes with whales, especially in Peru; and Peter Hamilton of Lifeforce Ocean Friends for his advice, support and interest.

FundersFunder number
Deivis Salazar Ruiz
Fundación Yubarta

    Keywords

    • anthropogenic threat
    • large whale conservation
    • recovering populations
    • reporting bias
    • ship strikes
    • threatened species
    • underreporting
    • vessel collisions

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