Ship-strike forecast and mitigation for whales in Gitga’at First Nation territory

Author:

Keen EM12,O’Mahony É13,Nichol LM4,Wright BM4,Shine C15,Hendricks B6,Meuter H7,Alidina HM8,Wray J19

Affiliation:

1. North Coast Cetacean Society, Alert Bay, British Columbia V0N 0C3, Canada

2. Earth and Environmental Systems, Sewanee: The University of the South, Sewanee, TN 37375, USA

3. Scottish Oceans Institute, University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews KY16 9AJ, UK

4. Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, Nanaimo, British Columbia V9T 6N7, Canada

5. Department of Geography, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia V8P 5C2, Canada

6. SoundSpace Analytics, Cumberland, British Columbia V0R 1S0, Canada

7. Pacific Whale Society, Hartley Bay, British Columbia V0V 1A0, Canada

8. WWF-Canada, Victoria, British Columbia V8W 3C6, Canada

9. Pacific Orca Society, Alert Bay, British Columbia V0N 0C3, Canada

Abstract

As marine traffic increases globally, ship strikes have emerged as a primary threat to many baleen whale populations. Here we predict ship-strike rates for fin whalesBalaenoptera physalusand humpback whalesMegaptera novaeangliaein the central territorial waters of the Gitga’at First Nation (British Columbia, Canada), which face increases in existing marine traffic as well as new liquified natural gas (LNG) shipping in the next decade. To do so, we utilized Automatic Identification System (AIS) databases, line-transect surveys, shore-based monitoring, whale-borne tags, aerial drone-based focal follows, and iterative simulations. We predict that by 2030, whale encounters will triple for most vessel types, but the change is most extreme for large ships (length >180 m) in prime whale habitat, in which co-occurrences will increase 30-fold. Ship-strike mortalities are projected to increase in the next decade by 2.3× for fin whales and 3.9× for humpback whales, to 2 and 18 deaths yr-1, respectively. These unsustainable losses will likely deplete both species in the coastal region of BC. Models indicate that the largest single source of mortality risk in 2030 will be from the LNG Canada project. Of the mitigation options we evaluated, a 10 knot speed ceiling for all large ships is potentially effective, but the best measure for guaranteed mitigation would be seasonal restrictions on LNG traffic. While certain data gaps remain, particularly with respect to humpback whales, our predictions indicate that shipping trends within Gitga’at waters will impact whale populations at regional levels. We provide our analysis in the R package ‘shipstrike’.

Publisher

Inter-Research Science Center

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology

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