Dear MARMAM recipients,
New open access paper in Frontiers in Remote Sensing:
Authors: Manuel Castellote, Robert J. Small, Kathleen M. Stafford, Alex 
Whiting, Kathryn J. Frost.
Title: "Beluga (D. leucas), harbor porpoise (P. phocoena), and killer whale (O. 
orca) acoustic presence in Kotzebue Sound, Alaska: Silence speaks volumes"
Link: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsen.2022.940247/full
Abstract:
Prior to 1984, belugas (Delphinapterus leucas) were seen in large numbers 
during spring and summer in Kotzebue Sound, Alaska, and provided an important 
subsistence resource to coastal residents. Sightings and harvest declined 
sharply beginning in 1984: the average annual harvest dropped from 84/yr 
(1977-1983) to 16/yr (1984-2021). To examine the current seasonal and spatial 
occurrence of belugas in Kotzebue Sound, passive acoustic moorings were 
deployed in summer 2013 and year-round in 2014-2016. Three moorings were 
deployed off Cape Krusenstern, northwestern Kotzebue Sound, to monitor 
cetaceans traveling nearshore. A mooring was also deployed near Chamisso 
Island, southeastern Kotzebue Sound. We used automatic detectors to process the 
recordings for echolocation and tonal signals, and all detections were manually 
validated. Belugas, harbor porpoises (Phocoena phocoena), and transient killer 
whales (Orcinus orca) were detected in both areas, primarily from June to 
November.  Detections extended into early winter for belugas, and sporadic 
detections were confirmed for porpoises from January to March. Belugas were 
detected on a total of 20 days, killer whales on 96 days, and porpoises on 179 
days. All beluga detections were echolocation signals; the absence of social 
signals likely reflects an anti-predator response to transient killer whales 
and possibly to subsistence hunters. Killer whale detections were composed of 
echolocation signals, limited to very short click trains, double clicks, and 
single clicks, a known cryptic acoustic behavior used when targeting prey. 
Killer whales also emitted high frequency whistles (17-51 kHz) providing the 
first evidence of these types of signals for transients. Our results suggest 
transient killer whales in predation mode scouting harbor porpoise and beluga 
habitat, concurrent with belugas in silent anti-predation mode. This 
anti-predation acoustic behavior by belugas was also evident when killer whales 
were not present, conveying a continued perception of predation risk for this 
habitat. The combined natural and anthropogenic predation pressure in Kotzebue 
Sound could be playing an important role in the continued low occurrence of 
belugas.

Sincerely,
Manuel Castellote

Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, and Ecosystem Studies, University of 
Washington
&
Cetacean Assessment and Ecology Program, Marine Mammal Laboratory
Alaska Fisheries Science Center, NOAA Fisheries
7600 Sand Point Way N.E. F/AKC3
Seattle, WA 98115-6349
email: manuel.castell...@noaa.gov
Voice: (206) 526-6866


_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to