Dear colleagues,

Our new paper, "Repeated narwhal interactions with moorings challenge
safety assumptions of passive acoustic monitoring in
the Arctic," has just been published and is available in Open Access here:

https://www.nature.com/articles/s42003-025-09106-4

[Abstract]

Passive-acoustic monitoring is known as a non-intrusive and transformative
tool for ecology and has been increasingly used for conservation and
biodiversity monitoring. This study, however, identifies a high level of
curiosity in narwhals (Monodon monoceros) with respect to scientific
moorings and partially explains recent cases of narwhal entanglements.
Using acoustic data from different locations and years together with
stomach content analysis, it is shown that foraging narwhals engaged in
repeated hits on seafloor moorings (11 times per day), presumably out of
curiosity or due to confusion with food items. It is a behavior previously
unknown for odontocetes. These results imply that oceanographic monitoring
might alter the behavior of whales and poses a risk to their well-being,
which should be investigated and accounted for in design. Our findings
reveal the intrusive nature of a key scientific method, with implications
for the management and conservation of vulnerable marine mammals.

Best regards,

Evgeny Podolskiy, Assoc. Prof.
Arctic Research Center,
Hokkaido University, Japan
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