Dear MARMAMers,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am pleased to announce the publication of our 
last paper entitled “Broad-scale study of the seasonal and geographic 
occurrence of blue and fin whales in the Southern Indian Ocean.”

Leroy EC, Samaran F, Stafford KM, Bonnel J, Royer JY (2018) Broad-scale study 
of the seasonal and geographic occurrence of blue and fin whales in the 
Southern Indian Ocean. Endang Species Res 37:289-300.

ABSTRACT: The southern Indian Ocean is believed to be a natural territory for 
blue and fin whales. However, decades after commercial and illegal whaling 
decimated these populations, little is known about their current status, 
seasonal habitat or movements. Recent passive acoustic studies have described 
the presence of 4 acoustic populations of blue whales (Antarctic and 3 ‘pygmy’ 
types), but are generally limited temporally and geographically. Here, we 
examine up to 7 yr of continuous acoustic recordings (2010-2016) from a 
hydrophone network of 6 widely spaced sites in the southern Indian Ocean, 
looking for the presence of Antarctic and pygmy blue and fin whales. Power 
spectral density analyses of characteristic and distinct frequency bands of 
these species show seasonal and geographic differences among the different 
populations, and the overall patterns for each display interannual 
consistencies in timing and occurrence. Antarctic blue and fin whales are 
recorded across the hydrophone network, mainly from austral autumn to spring, 
with peak intensity in winter. Pygmy blue whales show spatial variation: 
Madagascan pygmy blue whales are mainly present in the west of the network, 
while the Australian call type is heard at the eastern sites. Both populations 
share a common seasonality, with a presence from January to June. Finally, the 
Sri Lankan call type is recorded only on a single site in the northeast. These 
results confirm the importance of the southern Indian Ocean for several 
populations of endangered large whales and present the first long-term 
assessment of fin whales in the southern Indian Ocean.


This paper is available in open access : https://doi.org/10.3354/esr00927 
<https://doi.org/10.3354/esr00927%0a>
Alternatively e-mail me for a PDF copy, queries or comments: 
[email protected]<mailto:[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]>

_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to