Abstract

Autonomous recorders are frequently used for examining vocal behaviour of animals, and are particularly effective in remote habitats. Southern right whales are known to have an extensive acoustic repertoire. A recorder was moored at the isolated sub-Antarctic Auckland Islands for a year to examine whether the acoustic behaviour of southern right whales differed seasonally and throughout the day at their main calving ground in New Zealand. Recordings were made in each month except June, and vocalizations were audible in all months with recordings except January. A total of 35 487 calls were detected, of which upcalls were the most common (11 623). Call rate peaked in August (288 ± 5.9 [s.e.] calls/hour) and July (194 ± 8.3). Vocal behaviour varied diurnally with highest call rates detected at dusk and night, consistent with the concept that upcalls function primarily as contact calls. Zero-inflated model results confirmed that seasonal variation was the most important factor for explaining differences in vocal behaviour. An automated detector designed to expedite the analysis process for North Atlantic right whales correctly identified 80% of upcalls, although false detections were frequent, particularly when call rates were low. This study is the first to attempt year-round monitoring of southern right whale presence in New Zealand.

Highlights

  • Animals vary their behaviour in response to a wide range of factors, including changes in light levels [1], availability of prey& 2019 The Authors

  • The acoustic recorder was deployed at the Auckland Islands for 347 days from 22 July 2011 during which there were a total of 302 recording days (80.5% of deployment days), resulting in 892 h of acoustic data

  • Right whale vocalizations were detected in all months with recordings except for January

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Summary

Introduction

Animals vary their behaviour in response to a wide range of factors, including changes in light levels [1], availability of prey. Vocal behaviour of many animals 2 changes temporally. Terrestrial species, such as wolves (Canis lupus [7]) and many temperate and tropical bird species [8], exhibit diurnal variation in vocal activity with higher call rates during the late evening and dawn. The drivers of temporal variation in vocal behaviour can be difficult to determine, but may relate to optimal ambient noise and propagation conditions [9], energy reserves [10], predation risk [11] or sociality [8,12]. The calling activity of frogs [13] and some insects [14,15] is correlated with precipitation and temperature

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