Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my coauthors, I am pleased to announce our recent publication in 
Marine Ecology Progress Series:

Barlow DR, Bernard KS, Escobar-Flores P, Palacios DM, Torres LG (2020) Links in 
the trophic chain: modeling functional relationships between in situ 
oceanography, krill, and blue whale distribution under different oceanographic 
regimes. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 642:207-225.

ABSTRACT: The response of marine predators to global climate change and 
shifting ocean conditions is tightly linked with their environment and prey. 
Environmental data are frequently used as proxies for prey availability in 
marine predator distribution models, as the ephemeral nature of prey makes 
sampling difficult. For this reason, the functional, ecological links between 
environment, prey, and predator are rarely described or explicitly tested. We 
used 3 years of vessel-based whale survey data paired with oceanographic 
sampling and hydroacoustic backscatter to model trophic relationships between 
water column structure, krill availability, and blue whale Balaenoptera 
musculus brevicauda distribution in New Zealand's South Taranaki Bight region 
under typical (2014 and 2017) and warm (2016) austral summer oceanographic 
regimes. The warm regime was characterized by a shallower mixed layer, and a 
stronger, thicker, and warmer thermocline. Boosted regression tree models 
showed that krill metrics predicted blue whale distribution (typical regime = 
36% versus warm regime = 64% cross-validated deviance explained) better than 
oceanography (typical regime = 19% versus warm regime = 31% cross-validated 
deviance explained). However, oceanographic features that predicted more krill 
aggregations (typical regime) and higher krill density (warm regime) aligned 
closely with the features that predicted higher probability of blue whale 
presence in each regime. Therefore, this study confirms that environmental 
drivers of prey availability can serve as suitable proxies for blue whale 
distribution. Considering changing ocean conditions that may influence the 
distribution of marine predators, these findings emphasize the need for models 
based on functional relationships, and calibrated across a broad range of 
conditions, to inform effective conservation management.

The full article is open access, and available online: 
https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13339

Please feel free to contact me 
(dawn.bar...@oregonstate.edu<mailto:dawn.bar...@oregonstate.edu>) with any 
questions or to request a PDF copy.

Cheers,
Dawn

Dawn Barlow
PhD Student
Department of Fisheries and Wildlife, Marine Mammal Institute
Oregon State University, Hatfield Marine Science Center
Geospatial Ecology of Marine Megafauna Lab<https://mmi.oregonstate.edu/gemm-lab>
dawn.bar...@oregonstate.edu

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