Dear Colleagues,

Please find below the first announcement for a symposium and workshop scheduled 
for September 2011 in Chile. This is a collaboration developed by the Southern 
Ocean Research Partnership (SORP); a working group of the Scientific Committee 
of the International Whaling Commission.

While the focus of the symposium and workshop will be on application of 
existing and novel non-lethal research techniques to cetaceans in the Southern 
Ocean, it will provide an excellent forum for a more general discussion on 
advances in non-lethal research techniques for cetaceans. We welcome 
expressions of interest from those in the marine mammal research community 
interested in presenting papers or potentially convening sessions, supporting 
the symposium through financial support, or with suggestions about associated 
workshops. Please reply to [email protected].

More information is available at 
http://www.marinemammals.gov.au/sorp/living-whales-symposium.

Regards
Simon Childerhouse

Coordinator of the Southern Ocean Research Partnership

Australian Marine Mammal Centre, Australian Antarctic Division
Department of Sustainability, Environment, Water, Population and Communities
203 Channel Highway, Kingston 7050, Tasmania, Australia
Ph. +61-3-6232-3146
Mob. +61-439-317-605
Email. [email protected]
Web. www.marinemammals.gov.au; www.aad.gov.au


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FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT FOR A SYMPOSIUM AND WORKSHOP

LIVING WHALES IN THE SOUTHERN OCEAN: ADVANCES IN METHODS FOR NON-LETHAL 
CETACEAN RESEARCH

Objectives. The focus of the symposium and accompanying workshop is to review 
the strengths and weaknesses of current and new methods for studying living 
whales in the Southern Ocean. Specifically, the objectives are to advance the 
synergies of non-lethal methods for investigations addressing three broad 
themes:
1)      Population dynamics, health status and life history parameters of 
recovering whale species
2)      Ecological linkages, functional roles and relationships of whales in 
their ecosystem(s)
3)      The response of whales to climate change and anthropogenic impacts

Presentations will focus on methodological, analytical or technological 
advances in non-lethal methodology, including those that are still under 
development. There will be a focus on presentations that integrate methods. The 
symposium and workshop are part of the work of the Southern Ocean Research 
Partnership.

Key audience. The target audience for the workshop is scientists and managers 
interested in the application of new and developing non-lethal methods for 
understanding whales in the Southern Hemisphere and elsewhere. Given the 
multi-disciplinary nature of the symposium and workshop, it will have 
widespread appeal.

Structure. A one-day symposium will be followed by a two-day workshop.
Symposium. The symposium will have keynote speakers from a range of disciplines 
who will highlight advances in non-lethal research techniques. There will be 
presentations on specific research fields and also results from large-scale, 
multi-national programmes (e.g. IDCR/SOWER, SPLASH, SCANs, TOPP). In brief:

*         Keynote address (45 mins) - a presentation by an eminent scientist of 
non-lethal research providing an historical context for the development of 
non-lethal research, with a particular reference to Southern Hemisphere examples

*         Presentations of state of the art non-lethal research techniques (30 
mins each) - summarising the latest developments and describing the 
applications to southern hemisphere whales

*         Selected case studies (45 mins each) - providing detailed description 
of methods and analyses

Depending on interest, we may run concurrent sessions or possibly extend the 
symposium to 1.5 or 2 days to cover more material.

Workshop. A two-day workshop will follow the symposium and will focus on 
presentations by experts with significant time for discussion of new and 
evolving techniques and their application to the themes of the workshop.

Proposed location. To be confirmed but likely to be either Valparaiso or La 
Serena, Chile.

Proposed dates. To be confirmed but likely to be September 2011.

Steering Group. Scott Baker, Bob Brownell, Simon Childerhouse, Barbara 
Galletti, Ari Friedlander, and Nick Gales.

Costs. A small registration fee will apply but there will be reduced fees for 
students and researchers from developing nations.

Contact information: Living Whales Symposium, c/o Australian Marine Mammal 
Centre, Australian Antarctic Division, Channel Highway, Kingston, Tasmania 
7050, AUSTRALIA. Email. [email protected]. Web. www.marinemammals.gov.au/sorp

Programme The following research areas will be used to guide the development of 
the symposium and workshop programme:


1)      Photo-identification (e.g. catalogue curation, automated matching, 
applications (e.g. estimation of survival and reproductive rates, social 
structure)

2)      Genetic markers (e.g. species and subspecies id, genetic 
differentiation and population assignment, genotyping for individual 
identification and capture-recapture, genomics)

3)      Eco-markers (e.g. stable isotopes, lipid profile)

4)      Life history markers (e.g. ageing, pregnancy, health assessment, 
photogrammetry)

5)      Telemetry for habitat use and migration (e.g. satellite, GPS, short 
term archival tags, critter cam)

6)      Analytical techniques for animal movements

7)      Acoustics (e.g. species identification, density and direction, 
stationary and towed arrays)

8)      Distance surveys for abundance and habitat use (e.g. vessel-, aerial-, 
shore-based)

9)      Lessons from large-scale studies (e.g. IDCR/SOWER, SPLASH, YONAH, TOPP)

10)   Remote vehicles (e.g. gliders, drifters, balloons/blimps, UAVs)

11)   Analyses of behaviour and social structure (e.g. observation approaches, 
analytical methods)

12)   Population modelling

13)   Ecological modelling




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