Abstract

Odontocetes play an important ecological role as apex predators in the northern California Current System (CCS), which is characterized by seasonal rises in primary productivity fueled by wind-driven upwelling of cold nutrient-rich water. This productivity sustains higher trophic-level prey optimal for deep-diving odontocetes including beaked and sperm whales. Due to the cryptic ecology of these whales, there are few systematic studies of their occurrence across seasons in northern CCS waters. The Holistic Assessment of Living marine resources off Oregon (HALO) Project—a collaboration between Oregon State University and Cornell University—addresses this gap via quarterly vessel-based visual surveys and year-round passive acoustic monitoring (PAM). Here, we detect and classify species-specific odontocete acoustic signals using long-term spectral averages, automated click detection, and unsupervised clustering of semi-continuous PAM data from 10/2021 to 12/2022. Site-specific occurrence of beaked and sperm whales is revealed on hourly to seasonal temporal scales at three recording sites along a depth gradient spanning the continental slope (300 and 630 m water depth) and abyssal plain (2860 m). By relating odontocete detections to dynamic oceanographic conditions from nearby profiling moorings, we identify likely drivers of prey availability influencing predator distribution. These results will inform conservation efforts of cryptic odontocetes in the face of rapid environmental change.

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