Dear MARMAM community,

We are pleased to announce our recent publication on the presence of
female, juvenile and calf sperm whales off Ireland detailed below.

O'Callaghan, S.A., Griffin, B., Levesque, S., Gammell, M. and O'Brien, J.
(2024). Female, juvenile, and calf sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus
(Linnaeus 1758) records from Ireland. Ecology and Evolution 14(9), e70056.
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70056

Abstract
Sperm whales spatially segregate by sex and social behavior as they mature.
In the North Atlantic, male whales move to higher latitudes as far as
Svalbard at 80° N, while females and young whales typically remain around
lower latitudes below 40–45° N. The Azores, Madeira, and the Canary Islands
constitute important nursery grounds for female and young sperm whales.
Irish waters represent a midpoint for this species’ spatial segregation in
the Northeast Atlantic, where the species occurs along the submarine canyon
systems to the west of the country. Historically, just male whales were
thought to be found in this region between 51 and 55° N, but one adult
female was caught by commercial whalers in 1910, and a 5.49 m calf was
found stranded in 1916. Between 1995 and 2023, 10 female sperm whales have
been stranded around the coast of Ireland. Eight of these whales have been
stranded since 2013, and there has been at least one stranding per year
between 2019 and 2023. Four of these strandings have occurred in Donegal in
the northwest of Ireland, indicating the presence of female whales along
the continental shelf off this region. Two females were stranded within a
day of each other and were found in similar states of decomposition in
February 2022, indicating that they may have been part of the same group
rather than being lone vagrant individuals. Sperm whale calves and
juveniles were also sighted in Irish waters in 2001, 2004, and 2010 in the
Rockall Trough, along the Porcupine Bank and Goban Spur, where between 1
and 3 individuals were observed on four occasions while one calf live
stranded in 2004. These records indicate a historical presence of female
and young sperm whales in this region but that an apparent increase in
occurrence has taken place over the past decade.

The study is fully open access but you have any questions regarding this
work feel free to get in touch with me on [email protected]

Kind regards,

Seán
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