marine mammals life history, ecology and conservation

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Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

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Page 1: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Marine Mammals

Life history, ecology and conservation

Page 2: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

WHO ARE THEY?

Page 3: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Cetacea

whales, dolphins, and porpoises

Carnivora

polar bears, otters, seals, sea lions, walruses

Sirenia

manatees and dugongs

Page 4: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

CETACEA: Toothed whales

Page 5: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Bottlenose dolphin

Striped dolphin

Common dolphin

Page 6: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Risso’s dolphin

Focena comune

Globicephalo...

Killer whale

False killer whale

Rough-toothed dolphin

Page 7: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Risso’s dolphin

Harbor porpoise

Pilot whale

Page 8: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Sperm whale...

Cuvier’s beaked whale

Page 9: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

...Sperm whale

DNA

Page 10: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

CETACEA:

Baleen whales

Page 11: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Fin whale

Right whale

Sei whale

Humpback whale

Page 12: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

CARNIVORA:

Pinnipeds

Otariidae

sea lions, fur seals, etc

Phocidae

true seals

Page 13: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Otariidae

ear pinnae

eye

sagittal crest

snout

whiskers

mane

fore flippers

tail

scrotum

hind flippers

hind flippers

tail

whiskers(vibrissae) fore flippers

claws

snouteye

ear

Phocidaeor True seals

Page 14: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

CARNIVORA:

Pinnipeds

Odobenidae

walruses

Page 15: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

CARNIVORA:

Ursidae

polar bears

Page 16: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

CARNIVORA:

Mustelidae

sea otters, weasels, minks, etc

Page 17: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

SIRENIA:

Trichechidae

manatees

Dugongidae

dugongs, Stellar’s sea cows

Page 18: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

This presentation will focus...

...on dolphins and whales (cetaceans)!

Page 19: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Some terminology....

    

                                                        

Page 20: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

FROM LAND TO SEA

50 MILLION YEARS AGO 45 MILLION

YEARS AGO

40 MILLION YEARS AGO

35 MILLION YEARS AGO

30 MILLION YEARS AGO

25 MILLION YEARS AGO

20 MILLION YEARS AGO 15 MILLION

YEARS AGO

MESONICHIDAE

PROTOCETIDAEDORYDONTIDAE

SQUALODONTIDAE

DELPHINIDAE

Page 21: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

DIVERGENCE

Page 22: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

ADAPTATIONS

Page 23: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

ADAPTATIONS

Dog

Page 24: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

ADAPTATIONS

Underwater life:

• Streamlined body

• Fins

• Head and skull

• Eyes and ears

• Heat conservation

• Salt balance

• Buoyancy

• Genital protrusion, etc

   

Page 25: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Nostril migration

ADAPTATIONS

• breathing system

Page 26: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

ADAPTATIONS

• breathing system

Page 27: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

ADAPTATIONS

Perfectly adapted to marine environment!

Page 28: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

What are the differences?

Page 29: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

DIFFERENCES

Page 30: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

DIFFERENCES

Page 31: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

baleen

ventral groovestonguejaw

DIFFERENCES

Page 32: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

feeding Feeding

Humpback whales

Page 33: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

Gray whales

Page 34: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

Gray whales

Page 35: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

Other whales

Page 36: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Teeth

DIFFERENCES

Page 37: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Teeth

DIFFERENCES

Page 38: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

HOW DO YOU DETERMINE THE AGE OFHOW DO YOU DETERMINE THE AGE OFA DOLPHIN AND A WHALE?A DOLPHIN AND A WHALE?

Page 39: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

Group waiting to feed

Sentinel

Dolphins feeding

Sentinel

Page 40: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

Bottlenose dolphin

Page 41: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

Common dolphin

Page 42: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

Killer whale

Page 43: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

Sperm whale

Page 44: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Feeding

OTHER CAPTURE TECHNIQUES:

“crater feeding”

“fish whacking”

“strand feeding”

Page 45: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

How dolphins find their prey?

Page 46: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

How echolocation works?

Returning echo

Sound emission

Page 47: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Where is the food?

Page 48: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Migration...

Page 49: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

... and residency

Page 50: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

How dolphins move

Page 51: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Great variety of cetaceans

Page 52: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Tongue =

Heart =

Blue whale

Page 53: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Distribution

cold waters

rivers

tropical waters

Page 54: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Group sizes

Small schools

Large schools

Single/Pairs

Page 55: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Groups

• Advantages

• Disadvantages

Schools, pods & herds

Page 56: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

SOCIAL BEHAVIOR

Page 57: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Fission-fusion societies

                                             

   

 

Page 58: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Complex societies

Page 59: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Alliances and Superalliances

Page 60: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Courtship & Mating

Page 61: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Not easily distinguishable....

female

male

navel anusgenital slit

mammary slit

Page 62: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Birth

Page 63: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Long term bonds

Page 64: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Cetaceans’ sensory world

• Sight

• Smell

• Taste

• Touch

• Sound

Page 65: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Cetaceans’ sensory world

SOUND

• Communication whistles

• Echolocation clicks

Page 66: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Song of a whale

Dolphin whistles

Cetaceans’ sensory world

Page 67: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Modern humans=7.06Great apes=1.91Odontocetes=3.78Odontocetes=3.78

Brain and intelligence

Page 69: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Self-recognition

Sponge carrying

Page 70: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Unique mammals

Page 71: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

As humans increase their exploitation of marine As humans increase their exploitation of marine resources, individual dolphins, porpoises resources, individual dolphins, porpoises and whales suffer, their societies and whales suffer, their societies are disrupted, and their populations declineare disrupted, and their populations decline

(Whitehead et al. 2000)

Page 72: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Worldwide threats to cetaceans

WHAT ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT WHAT ARE THE MOST IMPORTANT ANTHROPOGENIC THREATS TO MARINE ANTHROPOGENIC THREATS TO MARINE MAMMALS?MAMMALS?

Page 73: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Present exploitation

• Aboriginal hunts

• Hunts in or by developing countries

• Whaling for scientific purpose

• Live capture

Page 74: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

By-catch

“It refers to the incidental capture of non-target species in fisheries” (Whitehead et al. 1999)

Effects nearly every cetacean species

Page 75: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

By-catch

Often unsustainable

Primary cause of population decline

May bring species close to extinction

560 <200

Page 76: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Habitat loss and degradation

Serious threat to inshore, freshwater species

Page 77: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Pollution

Oceans as

infinite trash

dumps...!?!

Page 78: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Competition with fisheries

likely to be a threat

BUT...

conclusive evidence is lacking due to complex ecosystem dynamics

Page 79: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Humans: use sounds in same wide range of frequencies to explore oceans

Noise is incidentally produced by most marine activities

Humans have potential to interfere acoustically with the lives Humans have potential to interfere acoustically with the lives of cetaceansof cetaceans

Noise and disturbance

Page 80: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Collisions with ships

Significant impact on mid/large cetaceans in areas of high/fast ship traffic

Page 81: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Global climate changes

“It’s generally agreed that the Earth’s climate is changing systematically in response to human activities” (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 1995)

“These changes are likely to affect virtually all life, including cetaceans” (IWC 1997)

Page 82: Marine Mammals Life history, ecology and conservation

Thank you!