Aloha Colleagues,
My co-authors and I are pleased to inform you about our paper "Diurnal
increases
in depths of humpback whale (*Megaptera novaeangliae*) mother-calf pods off
West Maui, Hawai’i: A response to vessels?" just published in the
journal *Marine
Mammal Science*.  Below, please find the full citation for the article and
the abstract. This is the fourth recent paper in our series examining
variations in habitat use in humpback whales in Hawaiian waters.  If you
would like to receive a pdf of this paper, please contact me at
[email protected].  Wishing everyone in our community good health, happiness
and peace.

Mahalo,
Adam

*Citation:  *
Pack, A. A., Waterman, J. O., & Craig, A. S. (2022). Diurnal increases in
depths of humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) mother-calf pods off West
Maui, Hawaiʻi: A response to vessels? Marine Mammal Science, 1–17.
https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.12926

*Abstract*:

Studies of humpback whale (*Megaptera novaeangliae*) habitat use in their
Hawaiian breeding grounds have revealed that mother-calf pairs favor
shallow waters to avoid harassment from males.  However, human activity in
these same waters may exert an opposing force on habitat use.  To
investigate this hypothesis, instantaneous scan samples of whale and vessel
distribution were collected from NW Maui, Hawai’i. Theodolite position
fixes were combined with GIS techniques to determine the depths and seabed
terrain type occupied by 161 humpback whale pods containing a calf (calf
pods) and 872 pods without a calf (non-calf pods). We found no significant
diurnal trends for non-calf pods, but calf pods occupied progressively
deeper water over the course of each day. There was no evidence that this
shift was related to (1) a “spillover” resulting from high mother-calf
density in shallow water, (2) harassment by males occupying the same space
as mother-calf pairs, or (3) the presence of mainly older and larger calves.
However, while diurnal trends of whale-watching vessels largely mirrored
those of mother-calf pods, non-whale-watching vessels tended to remain in
shallower waters throughout the day. These results suggest that nearshore
vessels may negatively impact the natural preference of mother-calf pairs
for shallow waters.


-- 
Adam A. Pack, Ph.D. Professor and Chair (Psychology)
Departments of Psychology and Biology
University of Hawai'i at Hilo
200 West Kawili Street
Hilo, Hawai'i 96720
(Office Voice): 808-932-7082
(Email): [email protected]
(Faculty Webpage): https://hilo.hawaii.edu/faculty/adam-a-pack/
(UH Hilo Lab):
https://hilo.hawaii.edu/faculty/adam-a-pack/marine-mammal-lab/
(Non-profit organization): https://thedolphininstitute.org/

"Do or do not; there is no try." Yoda
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