Dear MARMAM community,

We are excited to share our newest publication:

Coates, S.N., Sweeney, D.A., Falcone, E.A., Watwood, S.L., Rone, B.K.,
DeRuiter, S.L., Barlow, J., Dolan, K.A., Morrissey, R.P., DiMarzio, N.A.
and Jarvis, S.M. (2024). Insights into foraging behavior from multi-day
sound recording tags on goose-beaked whales (Ziphius cavirostris) in the
Southern California Bight. Frontiers in Marine Science. 11, p.1415602.


The full text is available here:
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/marine-science/articles/10.3389/fmars.2024.1415602/full


Abstract

Goose-beaked whales (*Ziphius cavirostris*) are deep-diving cetaceans known
for their elusive nature and specialized foraging behavior. In 2019 and
2020, six telemetry tags were deployed on these whales in Southern
California, resulting in 395 h of acoustic and diving data. Foraging dives
were manually identified by the presence of echolocation pulses and buzzes,
and generalized additive models assessed factors influencing foraging
behavior. The median bathymetric depth at foraging sites was 1,419 m (IQR =
359), and the maximum dive depth was highly correlated with bathymetry
depth. Individuals started echolocating on descent at a median depth of 410
m (IQR = 74); pulses were not observed shallower than 292 m. Echolocation
ceased during the bottom phase for 81.6% of dives, at a median depth of
1,265 m (IQR = 472); pulses were not observed shallower than 587 m on
ascent. The median depth of buzzes was 1,215 m (IQR = 479) with 63%
occurring during the bottom phase. Deeper dives correlated with longer
durations of diving and echolocation, greater echolocation end depths, and
wider bottom phase echolocation depth inter-quartile range. The median
difference between dive depth and bottom phase median echolocation depth
was 98.3 m (IQR = 48.5), suggesting whales in this region forage in a
narrow band close to the seafloor. In the San Nicolas Basin, individuals
exhibited longer echolocation durations, produced more pulses, and started
and ended echolocating at greater depths compared to adjacent regions.
These records validate and expand upon previous studies, providing insights
into factors influencing foraging behavior in an area with high
anthropogenic disturbance.


Please email me at [email protected] if you have any questions.



Cheers,
Shannon Coates
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