Dear MARMAMers,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am pleased to announce the publication of our 
study on Long-term and seasonal changes of blue and fin whale call frequency in 
the southern Indian Ocean:
Leroy, E. C., Royer, J.-Y., Bonnel, J., & Samaran, F. (2018). Long-term and 
seasonal changes of large whale call frequency in the southern Indian Ocean. 
Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 123. 
https://doi.org/10.1029/2018JC014352

Abstract:
In the past decades, in the context of a changing ocean submitted to an 
increasing human activity, a progressive decrease in the frequencies (pitch) of 
blue whale vocalizations has been observed worldwide. Its causes, of natural or 
anthropogenic nature, are still unclear. Based on 7 years of continuous 
acoustic recordings at widespread sites in the southern Indian Ocean, we show 
that this observation stands for five populations of large whales. The 
frequency of selected units of vocalizations of fin, Antarctic, and pygmy blue 
whales has steadily decreased at a rate of a few tenths of hertz per year since 
2002. In addition to this interannual frequency decrease, blue whale 
vocalizations display seasonal frequency shifts. We show that these 
intra-annual shifts correlate with seasonal changes in the ambient noise near 
their call frequency. This ambient noise level, in turn, shows a strong 
correlation with the seasonal presence of icebergs, which are one of the main 
sources of oceanic noise in the Southern Hemisphere. Although cause-and-effect 
relationships are difficult to ascertain, wide-ranging changes in the acoustic 
environment seem to have a strong impact on the vocal behavior of large baleen 
whales. Seasonal frequency shifts may be due to short-term changes in the 
ambient noise, and the interannual frequency decline to long-term changes in 
the acoustic properties of the ocean and/or in postwhaling changes in whale 
abundance.

This paper will be open access until December 30 and can be downloaded by 
clicking on this link: 
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1029/2018JC014352
Alternatively e-mail me for a PDF copy, queries or comments: 
[email protected]
Best regards,
Emmanuelle


Emmanuelle LEROY -- Research Fellow
MammalLab -- School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences
University of New South Wales -- 2052 -- Australia
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>



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