AbstractHarp seals require pack ice as a platform for resting, to give birth and nurse their young. They are also subject to commercial and subsistence harvesting. In the late 1990's there were concerns that the Northwest Atlantic population would decline to very low levels unless a management system using Potential Biological Removals (PBR) was adopted. Canada followed a different approach and high harvests based on an alternative management framework continued throughout the next decade. We examined the status of the Northwest Atlantic harp seal population using a three parameter population model that incorporates information on reproductive rates, removals, and ice-related mortality acting on young of the year. By 1971, the population ha...
The effects of climate change on high latitude regions are becoming increasingly evident, particular...
Like efforts to end the commercial hunting of whales, the campaign to stop the slaughter of seals in...
Benefitting from reduced harvesting and an end to culling, many marine mammals are now recovering fr...
AbstractHarp seals require pack ice as a platform for resting, to give birth and nurse their young. ...
Harp seals are the most abundant marine mammal in the north Atlantic. As an ice obligatory predator,...
Photographic and visual aerial surveys to determine current pup production of northwest Atlantic ha...
The Canadian government's current management procedure for harp seals is described by Fisheries...
The main objective of the working group was to review recent surveys of Greenland Sea harp and hoode...
The Canadian government's current management procedure for harp seals is described by Fisheries...
Climate change is affecting species’ distributions and abundances worldwide. Baseline population est...
<div><p>The effects of climate change on high latitude regions are becoming increasingly evident, pa...
We evaluate the current commercial harvest of harp seal (Pagophilus groenlandicus) and proposed subs...
In 2012, climate-warming related decreases in sea ice led to listings of ringed Pusa hispida and bea...
The impact of marine mammals, particularly seals, on the recovery of depleted fish stocks is a contr...
The population of the harp seal, Pagophilus groenlandicus, is divided into three distinct breeding g...
The effects of climate change on high latitude regions are becoming increasingly evident, particular...
Like efforts to end the commercial hunting of whales, the campaign to stop the slaughter of seals in...
Benefitting from reduced harvesting and an end to culling, many marine mammals are now recovering fr...
AbstractHarp seals require pack ice as a platform for resting, to give birth and nurse their young. ...
Harp seals are the most abundant marine mammal in the north Atlantic. As an ice obligatory predator,...
Photographic and visual aerial surveys to determine current pup production of northwest Atlantic ha...
The Canadian government's current management procedure for harp seals is described by Fisheries...
The main objective of the working group was to review recent surveys of Greenland Sea harp and hoode...
The Canadian government's current management procedure for harp seals is described by Fisheries...
Climate change is affecting species’ distributions and abundances worldwide. Baseline population est...
<div><p>The effects of climate change on high latitude regions are becoming increasingly evident, pa...
We evaluate the current commercial harvest of harp seal (Pagophilus groenlandicus) and proposed subs...
In 2012, climate-warming related decreases in sea ice led to listings of ringed Pusa hispida and bea...
The impact of marine mammals, particularly seals, on the recovery of depleted fish stocks is a contr...
The population of the harp seal, Pagophilus groenlandicus, is divided into three distinct breeding g...
The effects of climate change on high latitude regions are becoming increasingly evident, particular...
Like efforts to end the commercial hunting of whales, the campaign to stop the slaughter of seals in...
Benefitting from reduced harvesting and an end to culling, many marine mammals are now recovering fr...