Dear MARMAM Colleagues:

We are pleased to announce the publication of:

Hildebrand, J.A., Frasier, K.E., Baumann-Pickering, S., Wiggins, S.M., Merkens, 
K.P., Garrison, L.P., Soldevilla, M.S., and Mcdonald, M.A. (2019). Assessing 
Seasonality and Density From Passive Acoustic Monitoring of Signals Presumed to 
be From Pygmy and Dwarf Sperm Whales in the Gulf of Mexico. Frontiers in Marine 
Science 6, 66. 
doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00066<https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00066>

Abstract:
Pygmy sperm whales (Kogia breviceps) and dwarf sperm whales (Kogia sima) are 
deep diving cetaceans that commonly strand along the coast of the southeast US, 
but that are difficult to study visually at sea because of their elusive 
behavior. Conventional visual surveys are thought to significantly 
underestimate the presence of Kogia and they have proven difficult to approach 
for tracking and tagging. An approach is presented for density estimation of 
signals presumed to be from Kogia spp. based on passive acoustic monitoring 
data collected at sites in the Gulf of Mexico (GOM) from the period following 
the Deepwater Horizon oil spill (2010-2013). Both species of Kogia are known to 
inhabit the GOM, although it is not possible to acoustically separate the two 
based on available knowledge of their echolocation clicks. An increasing 
interannual density trend is suggested for animals near the primary zone of 
impact of the oil spill, and to the southeast of the spill. Densities were 
estimated based on both counting individual echolocation clicks and counting 
the presence of groups of animals during one-min time windows. Densities 
derived from acoustic monitoring at three sites are all substantially higher 
(4–16 animals /1000 km2) than those that have been derived for Kogia from line 
transect visual surveys in the same region (0.5 animals/1000 km2). The most 
likely explanation for the observed discrepancy is that the visual surveys are 
underestimating Kogia spp. density, due to the assumption of perfect 
detectability on the survey trackline. We present an alternative approach for 
density estimation, one that derives echolocation and behavioral parameters 
based on comparison of modeled and observed sound received levels at sites of 
varying depth.

The article is open access and can be downloaded from: 
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2019.00066/full

Sincerely,

John Hildebrand and co-authors


John Hildebrand
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
University of California San Diego
La Jolla, CA 92093-0205

Phone: 858 534-4069
www.cetus.ucsd.edu<http://www.cetus.ucsd.edu>



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