Deakin University
Browse
1/1
2 files

Increasing numbers of killer whale individuals use fisheries as feeding opportunities within subantarctic populations

journal contribution
posted on 2022-02-01, 00:00 authored by M Amelot, F Plard, C Guinet, John ArnouldJohn Arnould, N Gasco, Paul Tixier

Fisheries can generate feeding opportunities for large marine predators in the form of discards or accessible catch. How the use of this anthropogenic food may spread as a new behaviour, across individuals within populations over time, is poorly understood. This study used a 16-year (2003–2018) monitoring of two killer whale
Orcinus orca
subantarctic populations (
regular
and
Type-D
at Crozet), and Bayesian multistate capture–mark–recapture models, to assess temporal changes in the number of individuals feeding on fish caught on hooks (‘depredation’ behaviour) of a fishery started in 1996. For both populations, the number of depredating individuals increased during the study period (34 to 94 for
regular
; 17 to 43 for
Type-D
). Increasing abundance is unlikely to account for this and, rather, the results suggest depredation was acquired by increasing numbers of existing individuals. For
regular
killer whales, a plateau reached from 2014 suggests that it took 18 years for the behaviour to spread across the whole population. A more recent plateau was apparent for
Type-D
s but additional years are needed to confirm this. These findings show how changes in prey availability caused by human activities lead to rapid, yet progressive, innovations in killer whales, likely altering the ecological role of this top-predator.

History

Journal

Biology letters

Volume

18

Issue

2

Article number

ARTN 20210328

Pagination

1 - 6

Publisher

The Royal Society

Location

London, Eng

ISSN

1744-9561

eISSN

1744-957X

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal