Dear Marmam Community,

Please check out our recent article in Marine Mammal Science detailing a
new method for assessing gray whale body condition:

Title:
How Robust is Eschrichtius robustus? A Novel Photographic Index of Body
Condition From Boat-Based Photographs of Gray Whales

Abstract:
Although the eastern North Pacific gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus)
population has recovered from population declines associated with whaling,
they are closely monitored, especially in association with Unusual
Mortality Events. Metrics to improve assessment of the health of individual
animals, when averaged, are valuable to inform monitoring and management.
We used 30 years of photographic data of a unique gray whale feeding
aggregation to develop and test a new methodology for assessing body
condition. This group of individuals (20 as of 2021, but 11 in the study
group), known as the Sounders, regularly enter Puget Sound, Washington,
USA, to forage on ghost shrimp in the spring and early summer. Almost
35,000 images were examined and 729 were selected as being suitable to
assess individual body condition. Geometric measuring tools in open-source
image analysis software were used to measure a novel body condition angle,
°BC, as a proxy for changes in blubber thickness. This °BC varied
significantly with the day of the year, with increases in blubber thickness
observed as individuals progressed through the feeding season. Other
metrics, such as year and surfacing interval, were not found to have a
significant effect on °BC within this dataset. This novel index of body
condition illustrates the opportunity to develop new methods to
quantitatively assess change in individuals at both seasonal and annual
scales. Expansion of this method to the larger eastern North Pacific gray
whale population may allow for a more detailed examination of fluctuations
in body condition to better understand both environmental and anthropogenic
impacts. There is also potential for adaptation of the method to apply to
historic photo catalogs of other baleen whale species, creating
opportunities for enhanced data-driven management plans.

The article is freely available at: https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.70091

Cheers,
Dr. Erin Meyer-Gutbrod

-- 
Dr. Erin L. Meyer-Gutbrod *(she/her)*
Assistant Professor
School of the Earth, Ocean & Environment
University of South Carolina
https://meyer-gutbrod.weebly.com/

[email protected]
216-548-9082
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to