Abstract
Since its near extirpation during the period of industrial whaling in the early and mid 20th century, the once common Antarctic blue whale Balaenoptera musculus intermedia re mains extremely rare. While annual systematic surveys around Antarctica from 1978 to 2009 re corded only 216 visual encounters of this species, their loud and distinctive calls were detected frequently throughout the Southern Ocean. We describe and assess a new method for locating these whales by acoustically detecting their vocalisations, tracking the location of their calls, and finally locating the whales visually. This methodology was employed during an Antarctic research voyage from 140° E to 170° W, between January and March 2013. The loudest song unit (a 26 Hz tone) was detected at all 298 recording sites south of 52° S. Acoustically derived bearings from these whales enabled visual observers to eventually sight the whales, often hundreds of kilometres from initial acoustic detections. Received sound pressure levels of detections increased with decreasing range to several hotspots where both song and non-song calls were detected. Within hotspots, short- range acoustic localisation yielded 33 visual encounters of Antarctic blue whales (group size: 1 to 5 whales) over a 31 d period south of 60° S. These results demonstrate that acoustic tracking pro- vides the capacity to locate Antarctic blue whales widely dispersed over many hundreds of kilo- metres, as well as the capacity to acoustically track individual whales for days at a time irrespec- tive of most weather conditions. Thus, passive acoustic localisation is a reliable and efficient method to track Antarctic blue whales, and this technique should be considered for future studies of these iconic animals.
Highlights
Antarctic blue whales Balaenoptera musculus intermedia were almost extirpated by the industrial whal-Publisher: Inter-Research · www.int-res.comEndang Species Res 26: 257–269, 2015 ice in the Antarctic during the austral summer (Branch et al 2007), the remoteness of this location, low population size, hostility of the Southern Ocean, and high logistical costs allow for few opportunities to study these whales
Faint vocalisations from Antarctic blue whales Balaenoptera musculus intermedia were first recorded at 51.95° S, 157.55° E (Fig. 2)
Passive acoustic monitoring was extremely effective at long-range detection of Antarctic blue whales and in precise guidance of the research vessel for successful achievement of close approaches to Antarctic blue whales, irrespective of weather conditions
Summary
Antarctic blue whales Balaenoptera musculus intermedia were almost extirpated by the industrial whal-Publisher: Inter-Research · www.int-res.comEndang Species Res 26: 257–269, 2015 ice in the Antarctic during the austral summer (Branch et al 2007), the remoteness of this location, low population size, hostility of the Southern Ocean, and high logistical costs allow for few opportunities to study these whales. While a major goal of these surveys was estimating the abundance of minke whales Balaenoptera bonaerensis (Matsuoka et al 2003), the program recorded a total of 216 encounters with Antarctic blue whales over 32 yr (4112 vessel-days; 216 000 nautical miles [nmi] of transect lines). This low encounter rate yielded 3, somewhat imprecise, abundance estimates for Antarctic blue whales of 453 (coefficient of variation [CV]: 0.40) for 1981, 559 (CV: 0.47) for 1988, and 2280 (CV: 0.36) for 1998, with an average annual population growth rate of 8.2% (95% confidence interval: 1.6 to 14.8%; Branch 2007). A goal of this project is to develop and test new field-based and analytical methods that could yield a practical, cost-effective, long-term approach to monitoring Antarctic blue whales (Hammond et al 2013)
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