MARMAMers,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the publication of a new paper on 
beaked whale ecology and behavior as the featured article in the most recent 
volume of Marine Ecology Progress Series. The citation and abstract are given 
below and the full .pdf is available via Open Access at: 
https://www.int-res.com/articles/feature/m654p001.pdf

Benoit-Bird, K. J., Southall, B. L., Moline, M. A., Claridge, D. E., Dunn, C. 
A., Dolan, K. A., & Moretti, D. J. (2020). Critical threshold identified in the 
functional relationship between beaked whales and their prey. Marine Ecology 
Progress Series, 654, 1-16.

ABSTRACT: Anthropogenic noise is increasingly recognized as a potentially 
significant stressor for marine animals. Beaked whales, deep-diving cephalopod 
predators, have been disproportionally present in atypical mass stranding 
events coincident with military sonar exercises, while frequently disturbed 
populations that do not strand may have reductions in fitness. We present in 
situ measures of prey availability, a key factor affecting fitness, for 2 
distinct populations of Mesoplodon densirostris: one on a US Navy range in The 
Bahamas and one nearby in an area less exposed to sonar. The variables most 
strongly correlated with beaked whale habitat use were related to the 
distribution of deep-sea squid (mode spacing, peak depth, and 100 m scale 
variability). All squid metrics were more favorable for beaked whales at the 
less exposed site than those on the range. To develop a generalized functional 
relationship between prey resources and beaked whale habitat use, data from The 
Bahamas were combined with comparable data from another Navy range and the 
larger beaked whale, Ziphius cavirostris. A power-law relationship was observed 
between a normalized metric of prey quality and whale habitat use. A critical 
threshold in prey characteristics, below which beaked whales appear unlikely to 
be successful, but above which small changes in resource availability enable 
large gains for predators, was observed. This implies that modest changes in 
the behavior of individual whales associated with disturbance can have 
consequential population effects. Our results elucidate the ecological 
realities of these elusive and sensitive beaked whales, and the importance of 
environmental context in effective spatial planning for the deep sea.

Thanks,
Brandon Southall

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

Reply via email to