We are pleased to announce publication of the following paper:

Calling in the cold: pervasive acoustic presence of humpback whales (Megaptera 
novaeangliae) in Antarctic coastal waters (2013). Ilse Van Opzeeland, Sofie Van 
Parijs, Lars Kindermann, Elke Burkhardt and Olaf Boebel. PLOS ONE 8(9): e73007. 
doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0073007.

Abstract:
Humpback whales migrate between relatively unproductive tropical or temperate 
breeding grounds and productive high latitude feeding areas. However, not all 
individuals of a population undertake the annual migration to the breeding 
grounds; instead some are thought to remain on the feeding grounds year-round, 
presumably to avoid the energetic demands of migration. In the Southern 
Hemisphere, ice and inclement weather conditions restrict investigations of 
humpback whale presence on feeding grounds as well as the extent of their 
southern range. Two years of near-continuous recordings from the PerenniAL 
Acoustic Observatory in the Antarctic Ocean (PALAOA, Ekström Iceshelf, 70°31'S, 
8°13'W) are used to explore the acoustic presence of humpback whales in an 
Antarctic coastal area. Humpback whale calls were present during nine and 
eleven months of 2008 and 2009, respectively. In 2008, calls were present in 
January through April, June through August, November and December, whereas in 
2009, calls were present throughout the year, except in September. Calls 
occurred in un-patterned sequences, representing non-song sound production. 
Typically, calls occurred in bouts, ranging from 2 to 42 consecutive days with 
February, March and April having the highest daily occurrence of calls in 2008. 
In 2009, February, March, April and May had the highest daily occurrence of 
calls. Whales were estimated to be within a 100 km radius off PALAOA. Calls 
were also present during austral winter when ice cover within this radius was 
>90%. These results demonstrate that coastal areas near the Antarctic continent 
are likely of greater importance to humpback whales than previously assumed, 
presumably providing food resources year-round and open water in winter where 
animals can breathe.


Best Regards,

Ilse Van Opzeeland

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