Dear MARMAM readers,


My colleagues and I would like to share our new publication:


First evidence of bubble-net feeding and the formation of ‘super-groups’ by the 
east Australian population of humpback whales during their southward migration.


Pirotta V, Owen K, Donnelly D, Brasier MJ, Harcourt R. First evidence of 
bubble-net feeding and the formation of ‘super-groups’ by the east Australian 
population of humpback whales during their southward migration. Aquatic 
Conserv: Mar Freshw Ecosyst. 2021;1–8. https://doi.org/10.1002/aqc.3621

Abstract

  1.  The recovery of overexploited populations is likely to reveal behaviours 
that may have been present prior to harvest but are only now reappearing as the 
population size increases. The east Australian humpback whale (Megaptera 
novaeangliae) population (group V, stock E1) has recovered well from past 
exploitation and is now estimated to be close to the pre-whaling population 
size.
  2.  Humpback whales were thought to follow a ‘feast and famine’ model 
historically, feeding intensively in high-latitude feeding grounds and then 
fasting while migrating and in calving grounds; however, there is growing 
evidence that animals may feed outside of known foraging grounds.
  3.  This short article reports on the first photographically documented 
evidence of bubble-net feeding by humpback whales in Australian coastal waters 
(n = 10 groups observed) and provides the first evidence of a second site in 
the southern hemisphere for the formation of ‘super-groups’ (n = 6 super-groups 
at discrete locations).
  4.  The formation of super-groups may be linked to changes in the type or 
density of prey available, either along the migratory route or in the feeding 
grounds of the previous summer. It is also possible that the increased 
population size following recovery make large group sizes while feeding more 
common. These findings strongly support evidence that feeding behaviour is not 
restricted to high-latitude foraging grounds in the Southern Ocean, and that 
prey consumption prior to leaving the coastal waters of Australia may be a 
significant component of the migratory ecology of this population.
  5.  Understanding how environmental variation influences the extent to which 
humpback whales depend on foraging opportunities along their migratory route, 
and where feeding occurs, will help to predict how future changes in the ocean 
will influence whale populations. This will also allow for more effective 
management measures to reduce the impact of threats during this important 
period of energy consumption.

Vanessa

Dr. Vanessa Pirotta
Marine Predator Research Group
Department of Biological Sciences
Faculty of Science and Engineering
Macquarie University, NSW 2109, Australia
Twitter: @vanessapirotta
Superstar of STEM 2021-2022
Watch my TEDx talk here<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2PXgFoTtwi0>

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