Dear MARMAM community, 

We are pleased to announce the publication of our study of rorqual whale 
distribution and phenology off the coast of Oregon. 
This publication is part of the OPAL project (for more details see: [ 
https://mmi.oregonstate.edu/gemm-lab/opal-overlap-predictions-about-large-whales-identifying-co-occurrence-between-whales
 | 
https://mmi.oregonstate.edu/gemm-lab/opal-overlap-predictions-about-large-whales-identifying-co-occurrence-between-whales
 ] ) 

Derville S, Barlow DR, Hayslip C and Torres LG (2022) Seasonal, Annual, and 
Decadal Distribution of Three Rorqual Whale Species Relative to Dynamic Ocean 
Conditions Off Oregon, USA. Front. Mar. Sci. 9:868566. doi: 
10.3389/fmars.2022.868566 

Available on open-access: [ 
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.868566/full | 
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.868566/full ] 

Abstract: Whale populations recovering from historical whaling are particularly 
vulnerable to incidental mortality and disturbance caused by growing ocean 
industrialization. Several distinct populations of rorqual whales (including 
humpback, blue, and fin whales) migrate and feed off the coast of Oregon, USA 
where spatial overlap with human activities are on the rise. Effective 
mitigation of conflicts requires better foundational understanding of spatial 
and temporal habitat use patterns to inform conservation management. Based on a 
year-round, multi-platform distance sampling dataset (2016-2021, 177 survey 
days, 754 groups observed), this study generated density models to describe and 
predict seasonal distribution of rorqual whales in Oregon. Phenology analysis 
of sightings revealed a peak of humpback whale and blue whale density over the 
Oregon continental shelf in August and September respectively, and higher fin 
whale density in the winter (December). Additionally, we compared rorqual 
sighting rates across three decades of survey effort (since 1989) and 
demonstrate that rorqual whales are strikingly more prevalent in the current 
dataset, including distinct increases of blue and fin whales. Finally, density 
surface models relating whale densities to static and dynamic environmental 
variables acquired from data-assimilative ocean models revealed that summer and 
spring rorqual distribution were influenced by dynamic oceanographic features 
indicative of active upwelling and frontal zones (respectively 27% and 40% 
deviance explained). On the continental shelf, blue whales were predicted to 
occur closer to shore than humpback whales and in the more southern waters off 
Oregon. Summer and spring rorqual models, and humpback whale models, showed 
predictive performance suitable for management purposes, assessed through 
internal cross-validation and comparison to an external dataset (388 groups 
observed). Indeed, monthly hotspots of high predicted rorqual whale density 
across multiple years were validated by independent sightings (80% overlap in 
the summer model). These predictive models lay a robust basis for fine-scale 
dynamic spatial management to reduce impacts of human activities on endangered 
populations of rorqual whales in Oregon. 

Best, 


-- 
Solène Derville (she/her) 
PhD - Marine & Geospatial Ecology 
---------- 
101 Promenade Roger Laroque, BPA5 
98848 Noumea cedex, New Caledonia 
Phone: +687 912299 
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Solene_Derville 

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