Dear MARMAM community,

We are pleased to announce that our article, Exploring marine mammal
presence across seven US national marine sanctuaries, has been recently
published in a special issue of Frontiers in Remote Sensing.

The article is open access and can be found here:
https://doi.org/10.3389/frsen.2022.970401

Abstract
The United States of America’s Office of National Marine Sanctuaries (ONMS)
hosts 15 National Marine Sanctuaries (NMS) and two Monuments in its waters.
Charismatic marine megafauna, such as fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus),
humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae), and various delphinid species
frequent these areas, but little is known about their occupancy. As part of
a national effort to better understand the soundscapes of NMS, 22
near-continuous passive acoustic bottom mounted recorders and one
bottom-mounted cable hydrophone were analyzed within seven NMS (Stellwagen
Bank, Gray’s Reef, Florida Keys, Olympic Coast, Monterey Bay, Channel
Islands, and Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale sanctuaries). The daily
acoustic presence of humpback and fin whales across 2 years (November
2018–October 2020) and hourly presence of delphinids over 1 year (June
2019–May 2020) were analyzed. Humpback whales showed variability in their
acoustic presence across NMS, but in general were mostly present January
through May and September through December, and more scarce or fully absent
June through August. Consecutive days of humpback whale vocalizations were
greatest at sites HI01 and HI05 in the Hawaiian Islands Humpback Whale NMS
and fewest at the Channel Islands NMS. Fin whales exhibited a similar
seasonal pattern across the West Coast NMS and Stellwagen Bank NMS.
Monterey Bay NMS had the greatest number of median consecutive presence of
fin whales with fewest at Stellwagen Bank NMS. Delphinid acoustic presence
varied throughout and within NMS, with sites at the Channel Islands and
Hawaiʻi NMS showing the highest occupancy. All NMS showed distinct monthly
delphinid acoustic presence with differences in detected hours between day
versus night. Sixteen sites had medians of delphinid presence between one
and three consecutive days, while three sites had 5 days or more of
consecutive presence, and one site had no consecutive delphinid presence,
showing clear variation in how long they occupied different NMS. Marine
mammals utilized all NMS and showed a wide range of occupancy, emphasizing
the importance of understanding species use across different NMS as
biological areas for migration, breeding and foraging.

Article citation:
DeAngelis, A. I., Van Parijs, S. M., Barkowski, J., Baumann-Pickering, S.,
Burger, K., Davis, G. E., Joseph, J., Kok, A. C. M., Kügler, A., Lammers,
M., Margolina, T., Pegg, N., Rice, A., Rowell, T. J., Ryan, J. P., Stokoe,
A., Zang, E. & Hatch, L. (2022). Exploring marine mammal presence across
seven US national marine sanctuaries. Frontiers in Remote Sensing*,* 3
doi:10.3389/frsen.2022.970401

Cheers,

Annamaria DeAngelis

-- 

Annamaria DeAngelis

Research Biologist | Passive Acoustics Research Group | NEFSC

NOAA Fisheries | U.S. Department of Commerce

Office: (508) 955-0250

Fax: (508) 495-2066

NEFSC PSB Passive Acoustics Research Group
<https://www.fisheries.noaa.gov/new-england-mid-atlantic/endangered-species-conservation/passive-acoustic-research-atlantic-ocean>
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