Hello Everyone

We are pleased to announce the following paper that has been published in the 
journal Ecology and Evolution (online early view at the moment):


Mate, B. R., Irvine, L. M. and Palacios, D. M. (2016), The development of an 
intermediate-duration tag to characterize the diving behavior of large whales. 
Ecology and Evolution, 00: 1-11. doi: 
10.1002/ece3.2649<http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2649>
Abstract:
The development of high-resolution archival tag technologies has revolutionized 
our understanding of diving behavior in marine taxa such as sharks, turtles, 
and seals during their wide-ranging movements. However, similar applications 
for large whales have lagged behind due to the difficulty of keeping tags on 
the animals for extended periods of time. Here, we present a novel 
configuration of a transdermally attached biologging device called the Advanced 
Dive Behavior (ADB) tag. The ADB tag contains sensors that record hydrostatic 
pressure, three-axis accelerometers, magnetometers, water temperature, and 
light level, all sampled at 1 Hz. The ADB tag also collects Fastloc GPS 
locations and can send dive summary data through Service Argos, while staying 
attached to a whale for typical periods of 3-7 weeks before releasing for 
recovery and subsequent data download. ADB tags were deployed on sperm whales 
(Physeter macrocephalus; N = 46), blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus; N = 8), 
and fin whales (B. physalus; N = 5) from 2007 to 2015, resulting in attachment 
durations from 0 to 49.6 days, and recording 31 to 2,539 GPS locations and 27 
to 2,918 dives per deployment. Archived dive profiles matched well with 
published dive shapes of each species from short-term records. For blue and fin 
whales, feeding lunges were detected using peaks in accelerometer data and 
matched corresponding vertical excursions in the depth record. In sperm whales, 
rapid orientation changes in the accelerometer data, often during the bottom 
phase of dives, were likely related to prey pursuit, representing a relative 
measure of foraging effort. Sperm whales were documented repeatedly diving to, 
and likely foraging along, the seafloor. Data from the temperature sensor 
described the vertical structure of the water column in all three species, 
extending from the surface to depths >1,600 m. In addition to providing 
information needed to construct multiweek time budgets, the ADB tag is well 
suited to studying the effects of anthropogenic sound on whales by allowing for 
pre- and post-exposure monitoring of the whale's dive behavior. This tag begins 
to bridge the gap between existing long-duration but low-data throughput tags, 
and short-duration, high-resolution data loggers.

Link to the article:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.2649/full

Please contact me with any questions 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>).

Cheers!
Ladd


Ladd Irvine
Sr. Faculty Research Assistant
Oregon State University Marine Mammal Institute
Hatfield Marine Science Center
2030 S Marine Science Dr.
Newport, OR 97365

Phone: 541-867-0394

www.mmi.oregonstate.edu


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