Jaramillo-Legorreta Armando, Cardenas-Hinojosa Gustavo, Nieto-Garcia Edwyna, Rojas-Bracho Lorenzo, Ver Hoef Jay, Moore Jeffrey, Tregenza Nicholas, Barlow Jay, Gerrodette Tim, Thomas Len, Taylor Barbara
Instituto Nacional de Ecología y Cambio Climático/SEMARNAT, Coordinación de Investigación y Conservación de Mamíferos Marinos, CICESE Camper 10, Carretera Ensenada-Tijuana 3918, Zona Playitas, Ensenada, B.C, 22860, México.
Departamento de Biología de la Conservación, Centro de Investigación Científica y Educación Superior de Ensenada, Carretera Ensenada-Tijuana 3918, Zona Playitas, Ensenada, Baja California, CP 22860, México.
Conserv Biol. 2017 Feb;31(1):183-191. doi: 10.1111/cobi.12789. Epub 2016 Dec 5.
The vaquita (Phocoena sinus) is the world's most endangered marine mammal with approximately 245 individuals remaining in 2008. This species of porpoise is endemic to the northern Gulf of California, Mexico, and historically the population has declined because of unsustainable bycatch in gillnets. An illegal gillnet fishery for an endangered fish, the totoaba (Totoaba macdonaldi), has recently resurged throughout the vaquita's range. The secretive but lucrative wildlife trade with China for totoaba swim bladders has probably increased vaquita bycatch mortality by an unknown amount. Precise population monitoring by visual surveys is difficult because vaquitas are inherently hard to see and have now become so rare that sighting rates are very low. However, their echolocation clicks can be identified readily on specialized acoustic detectors. Acoustic detections on an array of 46 moored detectors indicated vaquita acoustic activity declined by 80% between 2011 and 2015 in the central part of the species' range. Statistical models estimated an annual rate of decline of 34% (95% Bayesian credible interval -48% to -21%). Based on results from 2011 to 2014, the government of Mexico enacted and is enforcing an emergency 2-year ban on gillnets throughout the species' range to prevent extinction, at a cost of US$74 million to compensate fishers. Developing precise acoustic monitoring methods proved critical to exposing the severity of vaquitas' decline and emphasizes the need for continual monitoring to effectively manage critically endangered species.
小头鼠海豚(Phocoena sinus)是世界上最濒危的海洋哺乳动物,2008年时仅存约245头。这种鼠海豚是墨西哥加利福尼亚湾北部特有的物种,历史上其种群数量因刺网不可持续的兼捕而下降。一种针对濒危鱼类——加利福尼亚湾石首鱼(Totoaba macdonaldi)的非法刺网渔业,最近在小头鼠海豚的整个活动范围内再度兴起。与中国进行的、涉及加利福尼亚湾石首鱼鱼鳔的隐秘但利润丰厚的野生动物贸易,可能使小头鼠海豚兼捕死亡率增加了未知的数量。通过目视调查进行精确的种群监测很困难,因为小头鼠海豚生性难以被发现,而且现在已经变得极为稀少,目击率非常低。然而,它们的回声定位咔哒声可以在专门的声学探测器上轻易识别。在46个系泊探测器组成的阵列上进行的声学探测表明,在该物种活动范围的中部,2011年至2015年间小头鼠海豚的声学活动下降了80%。统计模型估计年下降率为34%(95%贝叶斯可信区间为-48%至-21%)。基于2011年至2014年的结果,墨西哥政府颁布并正在执行一项在整个物种活动范围内为期两年的刺网紧急禁令,以防止其灭绝,为此花费7400万美元补偿渔民。事实证明,开发精确的声学监测方法对于揭示小头鼠海豚数量下降的严重程度至关重要,并强调了持续监测对于有效管理极度濒危物种的必要性。