Dear Colleagues,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the following publication made
available today in the Open Access journal, Animal Biotelemetry:

Szesciorka AR, Calambokidis J, Harvey JT. 2016. Testing tag attachments to
increase the attachment duration of archival tags on baleen whales. Animal
Biotelemetry 4(1):1-12. doi: 10.1186/s40317-016-0110-y.

http://animalbiotelemetry.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s40317-016-0110-y

Abstract

As biologging technology has advanced to study whale behavior, various tag
attachment methods have been developed. Suction cup attachments were
developed for short-term (<24 h) studies using high-resolution archival
tags, and implantable or dart attachments were developed for long-term
(months) studies using coarse-resolution satellite tags. The purpose of
this study was to test various tag attachment configurations to increase
the deployment duration of archival tags while minimizing potential
physical impacts to the whale.

>From 2013 to 2015, 31 humpback whales (*Megaptera novaeangliae*) and 20
blue whales (*Balaenoptera musculus*) were tagged, allowing us to test 10
tag attachment configurations, grouped as suction cup, suction cup with
dart, two-dart configurations with petals, four-dart configurations, and
four-dart configurations with petals. Durations resulting from four-dart
configurations with petals were greater than suction cup tags for humpback
whales (P = 0.04). Durations resulting from four-dart configurations with
petals were greater than all other tag attachment types for blue whales (P
< 0.04). There was no difference in reaction to tagging by tag attachment
type for humpback (P = 0.19) or blue whales (P = 0.24). Tags attached with
titanium darts were recovered with 2 darts (5 %) lost and 31 petals (14 %)
broken, whereas tags attached with stainless steel darts were recovered
with 1 dart (3 %) lost and 2 petals (1 %) broken. Re-sights of three tagged
animals up to 34 days after tags detached showed no sign of tearing or
swelling at the tag site.

Tag attachments using four darts with petals remained on whales the longest
with no increase in reaction to tagging by either species. Heat-treated
stainless steel darts resulted in equivalent tag attachment durations as
titanium darts but with reduced petal breakage. Attachments with four
darts, despite creating additional points of entry for potential bacterial
transfer, did not produce signs of tearing or swelling on animals
re-sighted up to 34 days after tagging. Attaching archival tags with four
stainless steel darts with petals on baleen whales will allow for the
collection of weeks of fine-scale data, allowing researchers to answer
questions about foraging, daily activity, and diel trends.

Feel free to contact me with any inquiries:
angela  @  szesciorka.com (without the spaces)

Cheers,

Angela Szesciorka, M.Sc.

Dr. Nancy Foster Scholar, National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration
fosterscholars.noaa.gov

Ph.D. Student, Scripps Institution of Oceanography
scripps.ucsd.edu/labs/sirovic

Research Biologist, Cascadia Research
www.cascadiaresearch.org
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