We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Will Culling the Northwest Atlantic Gray Seal Population, Halichoerus grypus (Fabricius, 1791) (Carnivora: Phocidae) on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA Reduce the Risk of Human-White Shark Encounters?
- Authors
Pearson, Kimberley Crocker
- Abstract
A recent fatality from a white shark bite in Massachusetts, U.S.A. has led local officials and members of the public to consider culling the population of gray seals in local waters. The seal population, which has been visibly increasing coincident with implementation of the Marine Mammal Protection Act, is thought to have attracted the white shark predators to the area. Were stakeholders to seek scientific evidence to inform a decision to cull, they would find little guidance. This study examines the scientific literature on culling and its impacts both on the species of concern and their ecosystems. Possible culling impacts are considered in the context of the biology and ecology of the Cape gray seal and white shark populations. Results are presented to inform decisionmakers about the feasibility, likely outcome and potential complications of a gray seal cull. The conclusion reached is that culling the Cape Cod gray seals is unlikely to abate the risk of human-white shark encounters on the Cape Cod beaches and could possibly have unforeseen consequences both for the local ecosystem and human activity.
- Subjects
CAPE Cod (Mass.); GRAY seal; MARINE mammals -- Law &; legislation; WHITE shark; MARINE ecology
- Publication
Life: The Excitement of Biology, 2018, Vol 6, Issue 3, p75
- ISSN
2325-081X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.9784/LEB6(3)Pearson.01