Artículos de revistas
Survival rates of the California sea lion, Zalophus californianus, in Mexico
Fecha
2008Autor
Hernández Camacho., Claudia Janetl
Aurioles Gamboa, David
Laake, Jeffrey
Gerber, Leah R
Institución
Resumen
California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) in the Gulf of California have declined by 20% over the past 2 decades. The lack of data on life-history parameters for this species has limited the development of demographic models to assess the status of this population.We estimated age- and sex-specific annual survival probabilities for California sea lions using resighting data on 5 pup cohorts from 1981 to 2006. We modeled apparent survival and resighting probability using age-class, sex, and time as potential explanatory variables. Apparent survival rates varied for different age- and sex-classes. Only survival of pups varied by year (from 0.556 to 0.998). Survival was the same for immature males and females (0.90), but differed by sex for young (males ¼ 0.90, females ¼ 0.97) and old (males ¼ 0.75, females ¼ 0.91) adults. Resighting probabilities varied by time, age-class, and sex. Resighting probabilities were higher for females than for males, and lowest for juveniles. The survival estimates presented here provide practical insight into understanding age- and sex-specific survival rates for California sea lions.