Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my co-authors, I'm happy to announce that our paper "Fin whale
acoustic populations present in New Zealand waters: description of song
types, occurrence and seasonality using passive acoustic monitoring" has
been published in PLOS ONE.

Constaratas AN, McDonald MA, Goetz KT, Giorli G (2021) Fin whale acoustic
populations present in New Zealand waters: Description of song types,
occurrence and seasonality using passive acoustic monitoring. PLoS ONE
16(7): e0253737. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253737

Abstract:
Southern fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus) are known to migrate from the
Antarctic to mid-latitudes during winter for breeding, but the occurrence
and distribution of this species is not well known in the waters around New
Zealand. The ‘doublet’ calls are one of the main calls emitted specifically
by fin whales and repeated in a regular pattern, which make the acoustic
detection of these calls relevant to detect the presence of fin whales.
Using a signal processing algorithm to detect ‘doublet’ calls emitted by
fin whales, we studied the occurrence, characteristics and seasonality of
these ‘doublet’ calls in two regions around New Zealand; Cook Strait in
2016/2017 and offshore Gisborne in 2014/2015. The call detection procedure
consisted of binarization of the spectrogram and a cross-correlation
between the binarized spectrogram and a template of binarized ‘doublet’
calls spectrogram. A binarization threshold for the data spectrograms and a
cross correlation threshold were then determined through multiple trials on
a training dataset and a Receiver Operating Characteristics (ROC) curve.
Fin whale ‘doublet’ calls occurred on the east side of New Zealand’s Cook
Strait during austral winter, specifically in June 2017 and offshore
Gisborne in June-August 2014. No ‘doublet’ calls were detected on the west
side of Cook Strait. The ‘doublet’ calls’ Inter-Note Interval (INI) was
similar in both datasets. However, there was a difference in alternation of
the mean frequency for both HF components of ‘doublet’ calls in Cook
Strait and Gisborne. As the song types were compared with those previously
described in the literature, our findings suggest that some fin whales
wintering in New Zealand waters may be part of a broader ‘acoustic
population’ whose range extends west to southern Australia and south to
Antarctica.

Please feel free to contact me at <[email protected]>
for questions.

Best,

Alexandra

Current affiliation: Soundscape data analyst, Blue World Institute of
Marine Research and Conservation, Veli Lošinj, Croatia
[email protected]
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