Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to share our recent paper in Scientific Reports.

Dodson S*, Oestreich WK*, Savoca MS, Hazen EL, Bograd SJ, Ryan JP, Fiechter J, 
Abrahms B (2024). Long-distance communication can enable collective migration 
in a dynamic seascape. Scientific Reports. *equal contributions. 
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-65827-2 

Abstract:
Social information is predicted to enhance the quality of animals’ migratory 
decisions in dynamic ecosystems, but the relative benefits of social 
information in the long-range movements of marine megafauna are unknown. In 
particular, whether and how migrants use nonlocal information gained through 
social communication at the large spatial scale of oceanic ecosystems remains 
unclear. Here we test hypotheses about the cues underlying timing of blue 
whales’ breeding migration in the Northeast Pacific via individual-based models 
parameterized by empirical behavioral data. Comparing emergent patterns from 
individual-based models to individual and population-level empirical metrics of 
migration timing, we find that individual whales likely rely on both personal 
and social sources of information about forage availability in deciding when to 
depart from their vast and dynamic foraging habitat and initiate breeding 
migration. Empirical patterns of migratory phenology can only be reproduced by 
models in which individuals use long-distance social information about 
conspecifics’ behavioral state, which is known to be encoded in the patterning 
of their widely propagating songs. Further, social communication improves 
pre-migration seasonal foraging performance by over 60% relative to asocial 
movement mechanisms. Our results suggest that long-range communication enhances 
the perceptual ranges of migrating whales beyond that of any individual, 
resulting in increased foraging performance and more collective migration 
timing. These findings indicate the value of nonlocal social information in an 
oceanic migrant and suggest the importance of long-distance acoustic 
communication in the collective migration of wide-ranging marine megafauna.

This paper is open access and available here: 
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-65827-2 

Best,
Will Oestreich
([email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>)


--
Will Oestreich
Postdoctoral Fellow
Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute
Website <https://www.woestreich.com/home>









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