Abstract

Individuals store energy to balance deficits in natural cycles; however, unnatural events can also lead to unbalanced energy budgets. Entanglement in fishing gear is one example of an unnatural but relatively common circumstance that imposes energetic demands of a similar order of magnitude and duration of life‐history events such as migration and pregnancy in large whales. We present two complementary bioenergetic approaches to estimate the energy associated with entanglement in North Atlantic right whales, and compare these estimates to the natural energetic life history of individual whales. Differences in measured blubber thicknesses and estimated blubber volumes between normal and entangled, emaciated whales indicate between 7.4 × 1010 J and 1.2 × 1011 J of energy are consumed during the course to death of a lethal entanglement. Increased thrust power requirements to overcome drag forces suggest that when entangled, whales require 3.95 × 109 to 4.08 × 1010 J more energy to swim. Individuals who died from their entanglements performed significantly more work (energy expenditure × time) than those that survived; entanglement duration is therefore critical in determining whales’ survival. Significant sublethal energetic impacts also occur, especially in reproductive females. Drag from fishing gear contributes up to 8% of the 4‐year female reproductive energy budget, delaying time of energetic equilibrium (to restore energy lost by a particular entanglement) for reproduction by months to years. In certain populations, chronic entanglement in fishing gear can be viewed as a costly unnatural life‐history stage, rather than a rare or short‐term incident.

Highlights

  • Periods of fasting and feeding are natural for wild animals, with consequent adaptation to withstand food limitations imposed by their environment or their life histories

  • How much additional energy do entangled whales expend, and what are the relative costs of entanglement compared with other energetically costly life-­history events? We present two separate but complementary bioenergetic approaches to estimate the amount of additional work and energy associated with entanglement in fishing gear in a large whale species: (1) changes in blubber thicknesses and volumes between normal and entangled, emaciated whales; and (2) increased thrust power requirements to overcome measured drag forces

  • We obtained dorsal axillary blubber thicknesses and body lengths of dead right whales measured at necropsy from the North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium (NARWC) necropsy database (NARWC 2015)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Periods of fasting and feeding are natural for wild animals, with consequent adaptation to withstand food limitations imposed by their environment or their life histories. Entanglement in fishing gear is the leading cause of death for large whales in the western North Atlantic (van der Hoop, Moore, Barco, et al, 2013) and contributes mortality to marine mammal species worldwide (Clapham, Young, & Brownell, 1999; Fowler, 1987; Read, Drinker, & Northridge, 2006), but the issue affects individual whales that survive the incident. We present two separate but complementary bioenergetic approaches to estimate the amount of additional work and energy associated with entanglement in fishing gear in a large whale species: (1) changes in blubber thicknesses and volumes between normal and entangled, emaciated whales; and (2) increased thrust power requirements to overcome measured drag forces. Measurements, theory, and available literature to outline the energetic life history of right whales in particular, to contextualize the demands, time course, and extent of entanglement in fishing gear

| METHODS
Findings
| DISCUSSION
| CONCLUSIONS
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