Hi Everyone,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the following article that was 
published in Ecology and Evolution: Sperm whale dive behavior characteristics 
derived from intermediate-duration archival tag data. The full article is 
available at the following link and the abstract is below:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.3322/full
Please contact me with any questions at 
ladd.irv...@oregonstate.edu<mailto:ladd.irv...@oregonstate.edu>
Ladd

Abstract

Here, we describe the diving behavior of sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) 
using the Advanced Dive Behavior (ADB) tag, which records depth data at 1-Hz 
resolution and GPS-quality locations for over 1 month, before releasing from 
the whale for recovery. A total of 27 ADB tags were deployed on sperm whales in 
the central Gulf of California, Mexico, during spring 2007 and 2008, of which 
10 were recovered for data download. Tracking durations of all tags ranged from 
0 to 34.5 days (median = 2.3 days), and 0.6 to 26.6 days (median = 5.0 days) 
for recovered tags. Recovered tags recorded a median of 50.8 GPS-quality 
locations and 42.6 dives per day. Dive summary metrics were generated for 
archived dives and were subsequently classified into six categories using 
hierarchical cluster analysis. A mean of 77% of archived dives per individual 
were one of four dive categories with median Maximum Dive Depth >290 m 
(V-shaped, Mid-water, Benthic, or Variable), likely associated with foraging. 
Median Maximum Dive Depth was <30 m for the other two categories (Short- and 
Long-duration shallow dives), likely representing socializing or resting 
behavior. Most tagged whales remained near the tagging area during the tracking 
period, but one moved north of Isla Tiburón, where it appeared to regularly 
dive to, and travel along the seafloor. Three whales were tagged on the same 
day in 2007 and subsequently traveled in close proximity (<1 km) for 2 days. 
During this period, the depth and timing of their dives were not coordinated, 
suggesting they were foraging on a vertically heterogeneous prey field. The 
multiweek dive records produced by ADB tags enabled us to generate a robust 
characterization of the diving behavior, activity budget, and individual 
variation for an important predator of the mesopelagos over temporal and 
spatial scales not previously possible.





Ladd Irvine
Sr. Faculty Research Assistant
Oregon State University Marine Mammal Institute
Hatfield Marine Science Center
2030 S Marine Science Dr.
Newport, OR 97365

Phone: 541-867-0394

www.mmi.oregonstate.edu


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