Dear MARMAM readers,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the publication of the following 
paper in Functional Ecology:



High suckling rates and acoustic crypsis of humpback whale neonates maximise 
potential for mother-calf energy transfer


Simone K. A. Videsen, Lars Bejder, Mark Johnson & Peter T. Madsen




URL: <http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2435.12871/full> 
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1365-2435.12871/full

DOI: 10.1111/1365-2435.12871

Summary
1.      The migration of humpback whales to and from their breeding grounds 
results in a short, critical time period during which neonatal calves must 
acquire sufficient energy via suckling from their fasting mothers to survive 
the long return journey.
2.      Understanding neonate suckling behaviour is critical for understanding 
the energetics and evolution of humpback whale migratory behaviour and for 
informing conservation efforts, but despite its importance, very little is 
known about the details, rate and behavioural context of this critical energy 
transfer.
3.      To address this pertinent data gap on calf suckling behaviour, we 
deployed multi-sensor Dtags on eight humpback whale calves and two mothers 
allowing us to analyse detailed suckling and acoustic behaviour for a total of 
68·8 h.
4.      Suckling dives were performed 20·7 ± 7% of the total tagging time with 
the mothers either resting at the surface or at depth with the calves hanging 
motionless with roll and pitch angles close to zero.
5.      Vocalisations between mother and calf, which included very weak tonal 
and grunting sounds, were produced more frequently during active dives than 
suckling dives, suggesting that mechanical stimuli rather than acoustic cues 
are used to initiate nursing.
6.      Use of mechanical cues for initiating suckling and low level 
vocalisations with an active space of <100 m indicate a strong selection 
pressure for acoustic crypsis.
7.      Such inconspicuous behaviour likely reduces the risk of exposure to 
eavesdropping predators and male humpback whale escorts that may disrupt the 
high proportion of time spent nursing and resting, and hence ultimately 
compromise calf fitness.
8.      The small active space of the weak calls between mother and calf is 
very sensitive to increases in ambient noise from human encroachment thereby 
increasing the risk of mother–calf separation.
This paper is available as pdf if you write me an email 
([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)

Kind regards,
Simone Videsen

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