Dear Colleagues,

The following paper was recently published in Marine Ecology Progress Series as 
an open access article accessible here: 
http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v581/p165-181/ 
<http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v581/p165-181/>.  For those of you 
attending the Society for Marine Mammalogy’s 22nd Biennial Conference on the 
Biology of Marine Mammals in Halifax next week, I will be presenting this work 
as part of poster session A (Bay 24.1).

North Atlantic right whale foraging ecology and its role in human-caused 
mortality

Mark F. Baumgartner, Frederick W. Wenzel, Nadine S. J. Lysiak, and Melissa R. 
Patrician

Endangered North Atlantic right whales Eubalaena glacialis suffer from 
unacceptably high rates of ship strikes and fishing gear entanglements, but 
little is known of the role that diving and foraging behavior plays in 
mediating human-caused mortality. We conducted a study of right whale foraging 
ecology by attaching tags to whales for short periods of time (hours), tracking 
their movements during daytime, and repeatedly sampling oceanographic 
conditions and prey distribution along the whales’ tracks. Right whales were 
tagged from late winter to late fall in 6 regions of the Gulf of Maine and 
southwestern Scotian Shelf from 2000 to 2010. The diving behavior of the tagged 
whales was governed by the vertical distribution of their primary prey, the 
copepod Calanus finmarchicus. On average, right whales tagged during spring 
spent 72% of their time in the upper 10 m (within the draft of most large 
commercial vessels), indicating the need for expanded ship speed restrictions 
in western Gulf of Maine springtime habitats. One out of every 4 whales dove to 
within 5 m of the sea floor during the short time they were tagged, spending as 
much as 45% of their total tagged time in this depth stratum. Right whales dove 
to the sea floor in each habitat studied except for one (where only 1 whale was 
tagged). This relatively high incidence of near-bottom diving raises serious 
concerns about the continued use of floating ground lines in pot and trap gear 
in coastal Maine and Canadian waters.


Mark Baumgartner
Associate Scientist
Biology Department
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
MS #33, Redfield 256
Woods Hole, MA 02543
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
www.whoi.edu/sites/mbaumgartner <http://www.whoi.edu/sites/mbaumgartner>
(508)289-2678 phone
(508)457-2134 fax



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