We would like to announce the publication of our new paper in Animal Behaviour 
- 'Studying cetacean behaviour: new technological approaches and conservation 
applications’  D.P. Nowacek, F. Christiansen, L. Bejder, J.A. Goldbogen, A.S. 
Friedlaender.  Animal Behaviour doi: 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2016.07.019.  This open access paper is 
available under Creative Commons license via the following link:

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0003347216301452

Abstract:

Animal behaviour can provide valuable information for wildlife management and 
conservation. Studying the detailed behaviour of marine mammals involves 
challenges not faced by most animal behaviour researchers due to the size, 
mobility and lack of continuous visibility of these animals. We describe 
several methods developed by marine mammal scientists to study behaviour, 
primarily of cetaceans, focusing on technological advances: unmanned aerial 
systems (UAS), satellite-linked telemetry, passive acoustics and multisensor 
high-resolution acoustic recording tags. We then go on to explain how the data 
collected by these methods have contributed to and informed conservation 
actions. We focus on examples including: satellite data informing the 
interactions between cetaceans and offshore oil and gas development; passive 
acoustics used to track distributions of several species of cetaceans, 
including their movements near shipping lanes; and high-resolution acoustic 
recording tags used to document responses of cetaceans to anthropogenic 
activities. Finally, we discuss recent efforts to link animal behaviour to 
individual fitness and, particularly for behavioural disturbances, to 
population-level consequences, which can be helpful for informing conservation 
efforts. The infusion of technological advancements into studies of cetacean 
behaviour combined with emerging analytical techniques brings us to the next 
20þ years of studying these animals. These developments will improve our 
capabilities in areas such as testing whether their behaviour adheres to 
traditional behavioural theory, and will certainly assist the guiding of 
conservation efforts.

Best regards,


Douglas P. Nowacek, Ph.D.
Repass-Rodgers Chair of Marine Conservation Technology
Nicholas School of the Environment & Pratt School of Engineering
Duke University Marine Laboratory
135 Duke Marine Lab Rd.
Beaufort, NC 28516
http://superpod.ml.duke.edu
http://oceanography.ml.duke.edu




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