Integrated Population Modeling Provides the First Empirical Estimates of Vital Rates and Abundance for Polar Bears in the Chukchi Sea

被引:0
作者
Eric V. Regehr
Nathan J. Hostetter
Ryan R. Wilson
Karyn D. Rode
Michelle St. Martin
Sarah J. Converse
机构
[1] U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,Marine Mammals Management
[2] University of Washington,Polar Science Center
[3] Patuxent Wildlife Research Center,U.S. Geological Survey
[4] Alaska Science Center,U.S. Geological Survey
[5] Washington Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit,U.S. Geological Survey
[6] School of Environmental and Forest Sciences (SEFS) & School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences (SAFS),undefined
[7] University of Washington,undefined
来源
Scientific Reports | / 8卷
关键词
Integrated Population Models (IPM); Polar Bear; Vital Rates; Breeding Probability; Habitat Metrics;
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摘要
Large carnivores are imperiled globally, and characteristics making them vulnerable to extinction (e.g., low densities and expansive ranges) also make it difficult to estimate demographic parameters needed for management. Here we develop an integrated population model to analyze capture-recapture, radiotelemetry, and count data for the Chukchi Sea subpopulation of polar bears (Ursus maritimus), 2008–2016. Our model addressed several challenges in capture-recapture studies for polar bears by including a multievent structure reflecting location and life history states, while accommodating state uncertainty. Female breeding probability was 0.83 (95% credible interval [CRI] = 0.71–0.90), with litter sizes of 2.18 (95% CRI = 1.71–2.82) for age-zero and 1.61 (95% CRI = 1.46–1.80) for age-one cubs. Total adult survival was 0.90 (95% CRI = 0.86–0.92) for females and 0.89 (95% CRI = 0.83–0.93) for males. Spring on-ice densities west of Alaska were 0.0030 bears/km2 (95% CRI = 0.0016–0.0060), similar to 1980s-era density estimates although methodological differences complicate comparison. Abundance of the Chukchi Sea subpopulation, derived by extrapolating density from the study area using a spatially-explicit habitat metric, was 2,937 bears (95% CRI = 1,552–5,944). Our findings are consistent with other lines of evidence suggesting the Chukchi Sea subpopulation has been productive in recent years, although it is uncertain how long this will continue given sea-ice loss due to climate change.
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