Dear Colleagues


I would like to draw your attention to the following PhD thesis which is now 
available on line to download at:  https://circle.ubc.ca/handle/2429/48453


Best regards

Frances



Frances C. Robertson. 2014. Effects of seismic operations on bowhead whale 
behaviour : implications for distribution and abundance assessments. PhD 
Thesis, University of British Columbia, Canada. 131pp.



Abstract

Assessments of distribution and abundance are a common means of gauging impacts 
of anthropogenic activities on wildlife. However, the influence of behavioural 
responses on estimated numbers and distributions of animals is rarely 
considered within this context. I used behavioural data collected in the 
Beaufort Sea from 1980-2000 to investigate the effects of seismic operations on 
the distribution and abundance of bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus). Bowhead 
whales are known to vary their dive and surface-respiration behaviour when 
exposed to seismic survey operations, although it is unknown whether these 
changes in behaviour differ by season, reproductive status and activity 
(feeding, socializing and travelling). Overall, I found that changes in 
behaviour of whales exposed to seismic operations were context dependent (i.e., 
they were contingent on the whale’s circumstance and activity). I then 
investigated the effects of these behaviour changes on the sightability of 
whales to aerial observers conducting line-transect surveys. I calculated and 
compared sightability correction factors specific to whales exposed and not 
exposed to seismic operations and found that whales in all circumstances were 
less available for detection when exposed to seismic sounds. In particular, 
non-calves were the least available to observers during autumn when exposed to 
seismic activities, regardless of activity state. I used line-transect distance 
sampling and spatial modeling methods to generate corrected density estimates 
for bowhead whales in an area of the southern Alaskan Beaufort Sea ensonified 
by seismic operations between late August and early October 2008 to investigate 
the extent to which density analyses were affected by changes in whale 
availability. The resultant density surface models revealed a wide-spread 
nearshore distribution of whales within the ensonified area with some spatial 
segregation related to activity state. Density estimates that accounted for 
variations in whale behaviour due to seismic operations were also 25–64 % 
higher than previous estimates.  Collectively, these findings suggest that 
seismic activities may not have displaced bowhead whales as previously thought, 
but altered their dive behaviours instead ,making them less visible for 
counting. My research demonstrates the importance of accounting for behavioural 
reactions when assessing impacts of seismic operations on distributions and 
abundances of whales.

Frances C. Robertson, PhD
Marine Mammal Research Unit
Fisheries Centre
University of British Columbia

Canada: 604 339 4967
US: 360 420 4403

www.distantfin.net
http://www.marinemammal.org/MMRU2/personnel/frances-robertson/
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