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Population-Level Impacts of Natural and Anthropogenic Causes-of-Death for Hawaiian Monk Seals in the Main Hawaiian Islands

September 16, 2020

In this analysis, we quantify not only the frequency of specific causes‐of‐death (CODs) among main Hawaiian Island monk seals, but also assess the impact of individual CODs on the intrinsic growth rate, λ, of this population.

Identifying, assessing, and ranking the impact of individual threats is fundamental to the conservation and recovery of rare and endangered species. In this analysis, we quantify not only the frequency of specific causes‐of‐death (CODs) among main Hawaiian Island monk seals, but also assess the impact of individual CODs on the intrinsic growth rate, λ, of this population. We used gross necropsy results, histopathology, and other evidence to assign probabilities of 11 COD types to each mortality and then used Monte Carlo sampling to evaluate the influence of each COD on λ. By right censoring realizations involving specific CODs, we were able to estimate λ (and its associated uncertainty) when CODs were selectively removed from influencing survival. Applying the analysis to all known and inferred deaths believed to have occurred 2004–2019, the CODs with the largest influence on λ were anthropogenic trauma, anthropogenic drowning, and protozoal disease. In aggregate, anthropogenic CODs had a larger effect on the growth rate than either natural or disease CODs. Possible bias associated with differential carcass detection, recovery, and COD classification are discussed.


Harting AL, Barbieri MM, Baker JD, Mercer TA, Johanos TC, Robinson SJ, Littnan CL, Colegrove KM, Rotstein DS. 2020. Population-Level Impacts of Natural and Anthropogenic Causes-of-Death for Hawaiian Monk Seals in the Main Hawaiian Islands. Marine Mammal Science.  https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.12742.

Last updated by Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center on 06/01/2021