Hi,

On behalf of my coauthors, I am pleased to announce the publication of a paper 
on winter occurrence of killer whales off Vancouver Island using a network of 
passive acoustic monitoring devices to examine both site-specific and regional 
patterns:

Pilkington J, EH Stredulinsky, K Gavrilchuk, SJ Thornton, JKB Ford & T 
Doniol-Valcroze. 2023. Patterns of winter occurrence of three sympatric killer 
whale populations off eastern Vancouver Island, Canada, based on passive 
acoustic monitoring. Frontiers in Marine Science 10:1204908

The paper is available in open access at the following link:
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2023.1204908

Abstract:
Understanding habitat use patterns of animal populations across space and time 
is fundamental to identifying ecological requirements, and informing threat 
mitigation and conservation strategies. Persistent data gaps tend to occur with 
cryptic species in difficult-to-access environments, where the use of 
appropriate monitoring tools is indispensable for detection. Three populations 
of threatened and endangered killer whales occur year-round in waters off 
British Columbia, Canada; however, their winter habitat use patterns are not 
well known. Here we quantify wintertime use of the northern Strait of Georgia 
by these sympatric killer whale populations, revealing the importance of this 
previously understudied region. Using a network of passive acoustic monitoring 
devices deployed over three winter periods, we examine site-specific and 
regional patterns of occurrence of Bigg's, and Southern and Northern Resident 
killer whales. All three populations frequented these waters in nearly every 
month from November to April, and across all study years. Bigg's killer whales 
were detected most frequently, followed by Southern Residents, then Northern 
Residents. Population-specific differences in site use was apparent, with 
Southern Resident detections occurring more often than expected off the 
southwest side of Texada Island, while Northern Residents appeared to favor the 
east side of Texada Island. Remarkably, the patterns of winter use we observe 
in this region by Resident killer whale populations have seemingly persisted 
for at least 50 years. Additionally, we evaluate and discuss the effect of 
using multiple simultaneous recorders to characterize habitat use patterns. 
Lastly, we present a data-driven approach for estimating acoustic residence 
time, describe inter-population differences in winter residency in the northern 
Strait of Georgia, and discuss implications for critical habitat designation. 
This study fills important knowledge gaps related to killer whale winter 
occurrence off western Canada, highlighting the significance of the northern 
Strait of Georgia for these at-risk populations.


Best regards,

Thomas Doniol-Valcroze, PhD
Head, Cetacean Research Program
Pacific Biological Station
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Nanaimo, BC,  V9T 6N7
thomas.doniol-valcr...@dfo-mpo.gc.ca<mailto:thomas.doniol-valcr...@dfo-mpo.gc.ca>

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