Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment

Limiting sea otter geographic distribution in California (containment management) has long been recognized as being necessary to preserve human recreational and commercialuses of shellfish resources. However, passage of federal legislation that focused preferentially on marine mammal protection and the 1977 listing of the California sea otter population as "threatened" effectively precluded any range-limiting management program.Research, however, that evaluated various non-lethal means of influencing sea otter movements and distribution was encouraged. Our research suggests that herding and acoustical devices may not have any real potential use in this context. Based on research-related capture success rates, capture and relocation techniques may be useful in influencing sea otter geographical distribution.The translocation of sea otters to San Nicolas Island provided the first opportunity to test the technical feasibility of maintaining a large area free of sea otters. Capture success rates were appreciably poorer than those achieved during research-related efforts. We identifyseveral logistical and behavioral influences that contributed to the relatively poor success rate. Based on this evaluation, we discuss the factors likely to limit application of these techniques in the future.We feel that capture techniques can be useful in a long-term management program, if used in conjunction with efforts to limit the sea otter population growth rate. Consequently, wefeel future research should focus on assessing individual health effects from using chemical contraceptives and assessing the feasibility of their use to safely control population growth. (12pp.)

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wendell, Fred, Pattison, Christine, Harris, Michael
Format: monograph biblioteca
Language:English
Published: California Department of Fish and Game Marine Resources Division 1996
Subjects:Management, Fisheries, Biology, Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, California,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18339
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-183392021-06-29T02:12:06Z Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment Wendell, Fred Pattison, Christine Harris, Michael Management Fisheries Biology Sea otter Enhydra lutris California Limiting sea otter geographic distribution in California (containment management) has long been recognized as being necessary to preserve human recreational and commercialuses of shellfish resources. However, passage of federal legislation that focused preferentially on marine mammal protection and the 1977 listing of the California sea otter population as "threatened" effectively precluded any range-limiting management program.Research, however, that evaluated various non-lethal means of influencing sea otter movements and distribution was encouraged. Our research suggests that herding and acoustical devices may not have any real potential use in this context. Based on research-related capture success rates, capture and relocation techniques may be useful in influencing sea otter geographical distribution.The translocation of sea otters to San Nicolas Island provided the first opportunity to test the technical feasibility of maintaining a large area free of sea otters. Capture success rates were appreciably poorer than those achieved during research-related efforts. We identifyseveral logistical and behavioral influences that contributed to the relatively poor success rate. Based on this evaluation, we discuss the factors likely to limit application of these techniques in the future.We feel that capture techniques can be useful in a long-term management program, if used in conjunction with efforts to limit the sea otter population growth rate. Consequently, wefeel future research should focus on assessing individual health effects from using chemical contraceptives and assessing the feasibility of their use to safely control population growth. (12pp.) 2021-06-24T14:49:42Z 2021-06-24T14:49:42Z 1996 monograph http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18339 en Marine Resources Division Administrative Report application/pdf application/pdf 33.1458 119.3 California Department of Fish and Game Marine Resources Division Morro Bay, CA http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/388 8 2011-09-29 22:07:52 388 California Department of Fish and Game
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Management
Fisheries
Biology
Sea otter
Enhydra lutris
California
Management
Fisheries
Biology
Sea otter
Enhydra lutris
California
spellingShingle Management
Fisheries
Biology
Sea otter
Enhydra lutris
California
Management
Fisheries
Biology
Sea otter
Enhydra lutris
California
Wendell, Fred
Pattison, Christine
Harris, Michael
Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment
description Limiting sea otter geographic distribution in California (containment management) has long been recognized as being necessary to preserve human recreational and commercialuses of shellfish resources. However, passage of federal legislation that focused preferentially on marine mammal protection and the 1977 listing of the California sea otter population as "threatened" effectively precluded any range-limiting management program.Research, however, that evaluated various non-lethal means of influencing sea otter movements and distribution was encouraged. Our research suggests that herding and acoustical devices may not have any real potential use in this context. Based on research-related capture success rates, capture and relocation techniques may be useful in influencing sea otter geographical distribution.The translocation of sea otters to San Nicolas Island provided the first opportunity to test the technical feasibility of maintaining a large area free of sea otters. Capture success rates were appreciably poorer than those achieved during research-related efforts. We identifyseveral logistical and behavioral influences that contributed to the relatively poor success rate. Based on this evaluation, we discuss the factors likely to limit application of these techniques in the future.We feel that capture techniques can be useful in a long-term management program, if used in conjunction with efforts to limit the sea otter population growth rate. Consequently, wefeel future research should focus on assessing individual health effects from using chemical contraceptives and assessing the feasibility of their use to safely control population growth. (12pp.)
format monograph
topic_facet Management
Fisheries
Biology
Sea otter
Enhydra lutris
California
author Wendell, Fred
Pattison, Christine
Harris, Michael
author_facet Wendell, Fred
Pattison, Christine
Harris, Michael
author_sort Wendell, Fred
title Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment
title_short Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment
title_full Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment
title_fullStr Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment
title_full_unstemmed Sea otter, Enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment
title_sort sea otter, enhydra lutris, containment management: field studies and feasibility assessment
publisher California Department of Fish and Game Marine Resources Division
publishDate 1996
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/18339
work_keys_str_mv AT wendellfred seaotterenhydralutriscontainmentmanagementfieldstudiesandfeasibilityassessment
AT pattisonchristine seaotterenhydralutriscontainmentmanagementfieldstudiesandfeasibilityassessment
AT harrismichael seaotterenhydralutriscontainmentmanagementfieldstudiesandfeasibilityassessment
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