Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my co-authors, I would like to share our recent findings, 
published open-access in the Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, with 
you.

Walsh, R., Allyn, E., Bradford, A., Norman, S., Stimmelmayr, R., and Scordino, 
J. 2024. Anthropogenic and killer whale (Orcinus orca) scarring on Pacific 
Coast Feeding Group gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) in northwest 
Washington. J. Cetacean Res. Manage., 25, pp.85-98. 
https://doi.org/10.47536/jcrm.v25i1.1044

The publication is open-access at the following link:
https://journal.iwc.int/index.php/jcrm/article/view/1044

Abstract:
Gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus) face many threats to their survival which 
are multi‐faceted and difficult to assess. In this study, we evaluate 
photographs of Pacific Coast Feeding Group (PCFG) gray whales taken between 
2014 and 2020 off the northwest coast of Washington to document the occurrence 
of scarring from fishing gear entanglements, vessel strikes and killer whale 
(Orcinus orca) attacks and compare our findings with scarring prevalence in 
gray whales off Sakhalin Island, Russia. We found that, of the 139 PCFG whales 
evaluated, 11.5% had scarring from entanglements, 3.6% had scarring from vessel 
strikes and 25.9% had scarring from killer whale attacks. We found no 
differences in scarring rates between males and females. Observed rates of 
scarring from entanglements for PCFG whales were less than rates observed for 
gray whales off Sakhalin Island, Russia, while scarring rates from vessel 
strikes were slightly greater for PCFG whales, but the differences were not 
statistically significant. The frequency of scars due to killer whale attacks 
on PCFG whales was significantly lower than reports for whales observed at 
Sakhalin Island. Estimates of anthropogenic and killer whale scarring in this 
study are likely biased low due to limited photographic coverage of the caudal 
peduncle and flukes, where scarring from entanglements and killer whale attacks 
are most commonly observed. The methods used here were similar to studies at 
Sakhalin Island, suggesting the evaluations had similar biases. If we assume 
that observations of non‐lethal scar sources on gray whales are proportional to 
mortality rates from those sources, findings from this study can help evaluate 
if current models present plausible injury and mortality estimates for PCFG and 
Sakhalin Island whales given the finding of no statistical difference in 
non‐lethal scarring rates between the two groups.

Regards,
Ryan Walsh
Makah Fisheries Management
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