Dear MARMAM Community,

On behalf of my co-authors at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the New 
England Aquarium, and the Naval Undersea Warfare Center, I am pleased to share 
a new publication:

Lonati, G. L., Zitterbart, D. P., Miller, C. A., Corkeron, P., Murphy, C. T., 
and Moore, M. J. (2022) Investigating the thermal physiology of Critically 
Endangered North Atlantic right whales Eubalaena glacialis via aerial infrared 
thermography. Endangered Species Research, 48:139-154. 
https://doi.org/10.3354/esr01193 (open access)

ABSTRACT: The Critically Endangered status of North Atlantic right whales 
Eubalaena glacialis (NARWs) warrants the development of new, less invasive 
technology to monitor the health of individuals. Combined with advancements in 
remotely piloted aircraft systems (RPAS, commonly 'drones'), infrared 
thermography (IRT) is being increasingly used to detect and count marine 
mammals and study their physiology. We conducted RPAS-based IRT over NARWs in 
Cape Cod Bay, MA, USA, in 2017 and 2018. Observations demonstrated 3 
particularly useful applications of RPAS-based IRT to study large whales: (1) 
exploring patterns of cranial heat loss and providing insight into the 
physiological mechanisms that produce these patterns; (2) tracking subsurface 
individuals in real-time (depending on the thermal stratification of the water 
column) using cold surface water anomalies resulting from fluke upstrokes; and 
(3) detecting natural changes in superficial blood circulation or diagnosing 
pathology based on heat anomalies on post-cranial body surfaces. These 
qualitative applications present a new, important opportunity to study, 
monitor, and conserve large whales, particularly rare and at-risk species such 
as NARWs. Despite the challenges of using this technology in aquatic 
environments, the applications of RPAS-based IRT for monitoring the health and 
behavior of endangered marine mammals, including the collection of quantitative 
data on thermal physiology, will continue to diversify.

Please reach out with any questions.  Thank you!
Gina & colleagues

Gina Lonati
PhD Student (she/her)
University of New Brunswick Saint John
https://glonati2222.wixsite.com/research
[email protected]

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