Dear colleagues,

I am pleased to share our recent publication on the population recovery of 
Australian southern right whales (Eubalaena australis) in Global Change Biology.

Grundlehner, A., Smith, J.N., Bannister, J.L., Andrews-Goff, V., Brasier, M., 
Double, M.C. and Corney, S.P. (2025), The End of an Era? Trends in Abundance 
and Reproduction of Australian Southern Right Whales (Eubalaena australis) 
Suggest Failure to Re-Establish Pre-Whaling Population Size. Glob Change Biol, 
31: e70218. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70218

Abstract
The large-scale exploitation of whale populations in the whaling era led to the 
near extirpation of large whales all over the world. This must have had major 
repercussions for marine ecosystems globally. Consequent changes to those 
ecosystems and physical environments create uncertainty around whether 
present-day conditions are adequate to support full recovery of pre-whaling 
population sizes. Combined with potential effects of anthropogenic stressors, 
the future viability of exploited whale populations is questioned. This 
migrating species was left near extinction from whaling and has shown slow, yet 
steady, recovery in recent decades. Here, we collate abundance data from aerial 
surveys performed along the Australian coast between 1976 and 2024, covering 
2250 km of coastal habitat, to study the recovery trajectory of Australian 
southern right whales (Eubalaena australis). We describe temporal trends in 
abundance, reproduction and growth of the western sub-population. Our study 
reveals that despite previously displaying exponential growth, and a present 
population size still residing far below pre-whaling levels, our annual births 
have started declining since 2016 and annual abundances of unaccompanied 
individuals have dropped by 66%. Our results suggest the end of an era of this 
population's recovery, highlighting that an initial period of steady recovery 
does not guarantee successful re-establishment of previous abundance levels.

The article is open access:
 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70218<http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.70218>

Kind regards on behalf of all authors,
Anne Grundlehner



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