Colleagues,

On behalf of my co-authors I am pleased to share the following publication:

Wray J, Keen EM, O’Mahony ÉN (2021) Social survival: Humpback whales
(*Megaptera
novaeangliae*) use social structure to partition ecological niches within
proposed critical habitat. PLOS ONE 16(6): e0245409.

Open access: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0245409

*Abstract:*
Animal culture and social bonds are relevant to wildlife conservation
because they influence patterns of geography, behavior, and strategies of
survival. Numerous examples of socially-driven habitat partitioning and
ecological-niche specialization can be found among vertebrates, including
toothed whales. But such social-ecological dynamics, described here as
‘social niche partitioning’, are not known among baleen whales, whose
societies—particularly on foraging grounds—are largely perceived as
unstructured and incidental to matters of habitat use and conservation.
However, through 16 years of behavioral observations and
photo-identifications of humpback whales (*Megaptera novaeangliae*) feeding
within a fjord system in the Canadian Pacific (primarily within Gitga’at
First Nation waters), we have documented long-term pair bonds (up to 12
years) as well as a complex societal structure, which corresponds closely
to persistent patterns in feeding strategy, long-term site fidelity
(extended occupancy and annual rate of return up to 75%), specific
geographic preferences within the fjord system, and other forms of habitat
use. Randomization tests of network congruency and clustering algorithms
were used to test for overlap in patterns of social structure and habitat
use, which confirmed the occurrence of social niche partitioning on the
feeding grounds of this baleen whale species. In addition, we document the
extensive practice of group bubble net feeding in Pacific Canada. This
coordinated feeding behavior was found to strongly mediate the social
structure and habitat use within this humpback whale society. Additionally,
during our 2004–2019 study, we observed a shift in social network structure
in 2010–2012, which corresponded with environmental and demographic shifts
including a sudden decline in the population’s calving rate. Our findings
indicate that the social lives of humpback whales, and perhaps baleen
whales generally, are more complex than previously supposed and should be a
primary consideration in the assessment of potential impacts to important
habitat.

Lead author Janie Wray is the corresponding author for this paper:
ja...@bcwhales.org

Best wishes,
Eric Keen
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