Dear colleagues, we are pleased to announce the open access publication of
our work. Here, we provide an updated estimate of the fecundity of Hector's
dolphin at Banks Peninsula. These findings demonstrate a lower reproductive
output than previously estimated.

ABSTRACT: Prediction of future population trajectories is vital in the
management of threatened species but requires accurate estimates of
demographic rates. One such parameter is fecundity, which is commonly
expressed as the number of offspring produced per female per year. The
endangered Hector's dolphin (Cephalorhynchus hectori) is Aotearoa New
Zealand's only endemic cetacean and is threatened by bycatch from inshore
trawl and gillnet fisheries. Here, we take advantage of 40 years of
continued photo-identification effort at Banks Peninsula to construct a
Bayesian open-population multi-event capture–recapture model. We estimated
fecundity for Hector's dolphins at 0.29 (95% credible interval [CI]:
0.22–0.39) which corresponds to an average calving frequency of one calf
every 3.4 years (95% CI: 2.5–4.7 years). This new estimate is substantially
lower and more precise than the previous estimate of fecundity for Hector's
dolphins (e.g., 0.409, 95% CI: 0.267–0.635), but is based on a larger
dataset, and aligns closely with estimates from other dolphin species. This
updated estimate of fecundity indicates a lower capacity for population
growth and reduced resilience to anthropogenic threats, including bycatch
in fisheries.

The study can be accessed at
http://doi.org/10.1111/csp2.70242

Dr. Steph Bennington,
Postdoctoral scholar Oregon State University,
[email protected]
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