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Dive into the research topics where Allison G. Henry is active.

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Featured researches published by Allison G. Henry.


Conservation Biology | 2013

Assessment of Management to Mitigate Anthropogenic Effects on Large Whales

Julie M. van der Hoop; Michael J. Moore; Susan G. Barco; Timothy V. N. Cole; Pierre-Yves Daoust; Allison G. Henry; Donald F. Mcalpine; William A. McLellan; Tonya Wimmer; Andrew R. Solow

Abstract United States and Canadian governments have responded to legal requirements to reduce human-induced whale mortality via vessel strikes and entanglement in fishing gear by implementing a suite of regulatory actions. We analyzed the spatial and temporal patterns of mortality of large whales in the Northwest Atlantic (23.5°N to 48.0°N), 1970 through 2009, in the context of management changes. We used a multinomial logistic model fitted by maximum likelihood to detect trends in cause-specific mortalities with time. We compared the number of human-caused mortalities with U.S. federally established levels of potential biological removal (i.e., species-specific sustainable human-caused mortality). From 1970 through 2009, 1762 mortalities (all known) and serious injuries (likely fatal) involved 8 species of large whales. We determined cause of death for 43% of all mortalities; of those, 67% (502) resulted from human interactions. Entanglement in fishing gear was the primary cause of death across all species (n = 323), followed by natural causes (n = 248) and vessel strikes (n = 171). Established sustainable levels of mortality were consistently exceeded in 2 species by up to 650%. Probabilities of entanglement and vessel-strike mortality increased significantly from 1990 through 2009. There was no significant change in the local intensity of all or vessel-strike mortalities before and after 2003, the year after which numerous mitigation efforts were enacted. So far, regulatory efforts have not reduced the lethal effects of human activities to large whales on a population-range basis, although we do not exclude the possibility of success of targeted measures for specific local habitats that were not within the resolution of our analyses. It is unclear how shortfalls in management design or compliance relate to our findings. Analyses such as the one we conducted are crucial in critically evaluating wildlife-management decisions. The results of these analyses can provide managers with direction for modifying regulated measures and can be applied globally to mortality-driven conservation issues. Evaluación del Manejo para Mitigar Efectos Antropogénicos sobre Ballenas Mayores Resumen Los gobiernos de Estados Unidos y Canadá han respondido a requerimientos legales para reducir la mortalidad de ballenas inducida por humanos por medio de impacto con embarcaciones y enmarañamiento en artes de pesca mediante la implementación de un conjunto de acciones reguladoras. Analizamos los patrones espaciales y temporales de la mortalidad de ballenas mayores en el Atlántico Noroccidental (23.5°N a 48.0°N), de 1970 a 2009, en el contexto de cambios de manejo. Utilizamos un modelo logístico multinomial ajustado por la máxima probabilidad de detección de tendencias en mortalidades por causa específica en el tiempo. Comparamos el número de muertes provocadas por humanos con los niveles de remoción biológica potencial (i.e., mortalidad específica provocada por humanos sustentable). De 1970 a 2009, hubo 1762 muertes (conocidas) y lesiones serias (casi fatales) involucrando 8 especies de ballenas mayores. Determinamos la causa de 43% de todas las muertes; de ellas, 67% (502) resultaron de interacciones humanas. El enmarañamiento en artes de pesca fue la causa principal de muerte en todas las especies (n = 323), seguida de causas naturales (n = 248) e impacto de embarcaciones (n = 171). Los niveles sustentables de mortalidad establecidos fueron excedidos consistentemente hasta en 650% en 2 especies. Las probabilidades de muerte por enmarañamiento y por impacto de embarcaciones incrementaron significativamente de 1990 a 2009. No hubo cambio significativo en la intensidad local de mortalidad por todas las causas o por impacto de embarcaciones antes y después de 2003, año en el que se implementaron numerosos esfuerzos de mitigación. Hasta ahora, los esfuerzos regulatorios no han reducido los efectos letales de las actividades humanas sobre las ballenas a nivel de población, aunque no excluimos la posibilidad de éxito de medidas enfocadas a hábitats locales específicos que no estuvieron dentro de la resolución de nuestro análisis. No es claro como se relacionan con nuestros resultados las deficiencias en el diseño o implementación del manejo. Análisis como el que realizamos son cruciales para la evaluación crítica de decisiones para el manejo de vida silvestre, y los resultados de estos análisis pueden proporcionar directrices a los manejadores para que modifiquen medidas regulatorias y puedan ser aplicadas globalmente en temas de conservación relacionadas con mortalidad.


Archive | 2013

Mortality Determinations for Baleen Whale Stocks along the Gulf of Mexico, United States East Coast, and Atlantic Canadian Provinces, 2007-2011

Allison G. Henry; Lanni Hall; Wayne Ledwell; David Morin; Andrew Reid

iv INTRODUCTION 1 METHODS 1 Confirmation Criteria for Species and Mortality Event 2 Human-induced Mortality Determinations 2 Assignment to Country 3 RESULTS 3 DISCUSSION 5 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 5 LITERATURE CITED 6 Table 1. Summary of all unique large whale mortalities observed along the Gulf of Mexico Coast, US East Coast and Atlantic Canadian Provinces, 2007-2011. Determinations of human-caused mortality follow the criteria established by the NEFSC. 7 Table 2. Confirmed human-caused mortality records of baleen whale stocks along the Gulf of Mexico, US East Coast and Atlantic Canadian Provinces, 2007-2011 8 Table 3. Summary of country of origin for all confirmed human-caused mortalities of large whales along the Gulf of Mexico, US East Coast and Atlantic Canadian Provinces, 2007-2011 15


Archive | 2014

U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico marine mammal stock assessments, 2013

Gordon T. Waring; Elizabeth Josephson; Katherine Maze-Foley; Patricia E. Rosel; Timothy V. N. Cole; Laura Engleby; Lance Preston Garrison; Allison G. Henry; Keith D. Mullin; Christopher Orphanides; Richard M. Pace; Debra L. Palka; Marjorie Lyssikatos; Frederick W. Wenzel

1National Marine Fisheries Service, 166 Water St., Woods Hole, MA 02543 2National Marine Fisheries Service, 75 Virginia Beach Dr., Miami, FL 33149 3National Marine Fisheries Service, 219 Ft. Johnson Rd., Charleston, SC 29412 4National Marine Fisheries Service, 3209 Frederic St., Pascagoula, MS 39567 5Mote Marine Laboratory, 1600 Ken Thompson Pkwy., Sarasota, FL 34236 6Sea World, Inc., 7007 Sea World Dr., Orlando, FL 32821


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2017

Predicting lethal entanglements as a consequence of drag from fishing gear

Julie M. van der Hoop; Peter Corkeron; Allison G. Henry; Amy R. Knowlton; Michael J. Moore

Large whales are frequently entangled in fishing gear and sometimes swim while carrying gear for days to years. Entangled whales are subject to additional drag forces requiring increased thrust power and energy expenditure over time. To classify entanglement cases and aid potential disentanglement efforts, it is useful to know how long an entangled whale might survive, given the unique configurations of the gear they are towing. This study establishes an approach to predict drag forces on fishing gear that entangles whales, and applies this method to ten North Atlantic right whale cases to estimate the resulting increase in energy expenditure and the critical entanglement duration that could lead to death. Estimated gear drag ranged 11-275N. Most entanglements were resolved before critical entanglement durations (mean±SD 216±260days) were reached. These estimates can assist real-time development of disentanglement action plans and U.S. Federal Serious Injury assessments required for protected species.


Archive | 2017

Don’t assume it’s ghost gear : accurate gear characterization is critical for entanglement mitigation [poster]

Allison G. Henry; Susan G. Barco; Timothy V. N. Cole; Amanda Johnson; Amy R. Knowlton; Scott Landry; David K. Mattila; Michael J. Moore; Jooke Robbins; Julie M. van der Hoop; Regina Asmutis-Silvia

Presented at the Society for Marine Mammology 22nd Biennial Marine Mammal Conference, Halifax, Nova Scotia, October 23-27, 2017


Conservation Letters | 2015

Vessel Strikes to Large Whales Before and After the 2008 Ship Strike Rule

Julie M. van der Hoop; Angelia S. M. Vanderlaan; Timothy V. N. Cole; Allison G. Henry; Lanni Hall; Blair Mase-Guthrie; Tonya Wimmer; Michael J. Moore


Endangered Species Research | 2013

Evidence of a North Atlantic right whale Eubalaena glacialis mating ground

Timothy V. N. Cole; Philip K. Hamilton; Allison G. Henry; Peter Duley; Richard M. Pace; Bradley N. White; Timothy R. Frasier


Endangered Species Research | 2014

Incremental fishing gear modifications fail to significantly reduce large whale serious injury rates

Richard M. Pace; Timothy V. N. Cole; Allison G. Henry


Archive | 2012

Mortality and serious injury determinations for baleen whale stocks along the Gulf of Mexico, United States, United States East Coast and Atlantic Canadian Provinces, 2010-2014

Allison G. Henry; Timothy V. N. Cole; Mendy Garron; Wayne Ledwell; David Morin; Andrew Reid


Archive | 2013

U.S. Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico Marine Mammal Stock Assessments - 2012

Gordon T. Waring; Elizabeth Josephson; Katherine Maze-Foley; Patricia E. Rosel; Kevin Barry; Barbie L. Byrd; Timothy V. N. Cole; Laura Engleby; Carol P. Fairfield; Lance P. Garrison; Allison G. Henry; Larry J. Hansen; Jenny Litz; Christopher Orphanides; Richard M. Pace; Debra L. Palka; Marjorie C. Rossman; Carrie Sinclair; Frederick W. Wenzel

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Timothy V. N. Cole

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Julie M. van der Hoop

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Michael J. Moore

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Richard M. Pace

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Christopher Orphanides

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Frederick W. Wenzel

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Gordon T. Waring

National Marine Fisheries Service

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Lanni Hall

National Marine Fisheries Service

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