Dear MARMAM community,

 

On behalf of my coauthors, I am pleased to announce the publication of our 
work, “Spatial Analysis of Beaked Whale Foraging During Two 12 kHz Multibeam 
Echosounder Surveys,” in Frontiers in Marine Science.  This article is freely 
available at: https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fmars.2021.654184. 
The abstract and full citation are included below for your convenience. 

 

ABSTRACT:

To add to the growing information about the effect of multibeam echosounder 
(MBES) operation on marine mammals, a study was conducted to assess the spatial 
foraging effort of Cuvier’s beaked whales during two MBES surveys conducted in 
January of 2017 and 2019 off of San Clemente Island, California. The MBES 
surveys took place on the Southern California Antisubmarine Warfare Range 
(SOAR), which contains an array of 89 hydrophones covering an area of 
approximately 1800 km2 over which foraging beaked whales were detected. A 
spatial autocorrelation analysis of foraging effort was conducted using the 
Moran’s I (global) and the Getis-Ord Gi∗ (local) statistics, to understand the 
animals’ spatial use of the entire SOAR, as well as smaller areas, 
respectively, within the SOAR Before, During, and After the two MBES surveys. 
In both years, the global Moran’s I statistic suggested significant spatial 
clustering of foraging events on the SOAR during all analysis periods (Before, 
During, and After). In addition, a Kruskal-Wallis (comparison) test of both 
years revealed that the number of foraging events across analysis periods were 
similar within a given year. In 2017, the local Getis-Ord Gi∗ analysis 
identified hot spots of foraging activity in the same general area of the SOAR 
during all analysis periods. This local result, in combination with the global 
and comparison results of 2017, suggest there was no obvious period-related 
change detected in foraging effort associated with the 2017 MBES survey at the 
resolution measurable with the hydrophone array. In 2019, the foraging hot spot 
area shifted from the southernmost corner of the SOAR Before, to the center 
During, and was split between the two locations After the MBES survey. Due to 
the pattern of period-related spatial change identified in 2019, and the lack 
of change detected in 2017, it was unclear whether the change detected in 2019 
was a result of MBES activity or some other environmental factor. Nonetheless, 
the results strongly suggest that the level of detected foraging during either 
MBES survey did not change, and most of the foraging effort remained in the 
historically well-utilized foraging locations of Cuvier’s beaked whales on the 
SOAR.

 

Kates Varghese, H., Lowell, K., Miksis-Olds, J., DiMarzio, N., Moretti, D., and 
Mayer, L. (2021). Spatial Analysis of Beaked Whale Foraging During Two 12 kHz 
Multibeam Echosounder Surveys. Frontiers in Marine Science 8, 1139. Doi: 
10.3389/fmars.2021.654184

 

Thank you!

 

Hilary Kates Varghese

(she/her/hers)

PhD Candidate-Earth Sciences, Oceanography

University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, USA

hkatesvargh...@ccom.unh.edu

 

 

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