Climate change complicates efforts to ensure survival and recovery of St. Lawrence Estuary beluga
Abstract
Decades after a ban on hunting, and despite focused management interventions, the endangered St. Lawrence Estuary (SLE) beluga (Delphinapterus leucas) population has failed to recover. We applied a population viability analysis to simulate the responses of the SLE beluga population across a wide range of variability and uncertainty under current and projected changes in environmental and climate-mediated conditions. Three proximate threats to recovery were explored: ocean noise; contaminants; and prey limitation. Even the most optimistic scenarios failed to achieve the reliable positive population growth needed to meet current recovery targets. Here we show that predicted effects of climate change may be a more significant driver of SLE beluga population dynamics than the proximate threats we considered. Aggressive mitigation of all three proximate threats will be needed to build the population's resilience and allow the population to persist long enough for global actions to mitigate climate change to take effect.
Citation
Williams , R , Lacy , R C , Ashe , E , Hall , A , Plourde , S , McQuinn , I H & Lesage , V 2021 , ' Climate change complicates efforts to ensure survival and recovery of St. Lawrence Estuary beluga ' , Marine Pollution Bulletin , vol. 173 , no. Part B , 113096 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.113096
Publication
Marine Pollution Bulletin
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0025-326XType
Journal article
Description
This study was funded by the Species at Risk programme of Fisheries and Oceans Canada.Collections
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