Dear MARMAM community,

My coauthors and I are pleased to announce the open-access publication of
our paper, "Cetacean occurrence in the Gulf of Alaska from long-term
passive acoustic monitoring" in *Marine Biology*.

Abstract:
The Gulf of Alaska is an important habitat for a diverse array of marine
mammals, many of which were severely depleted by historical whaling. To
study current cetacean distributions in this region, passive acoustic
monitoring was used to detect species-specific call types between 2011 and
2015 at five locations spanning the continental shelf, slope, and offshore
seamounts. Spatial and temporal detection patterns were examined for nine
species to compare differences in behavior and habitat use. Mysticetes
showed seasonal increases in calling that indicated possible behavioral
shifts between feeding and breeding in blue (*Balaenoptera musculus*), fin (*B.
physalus*), and humpback (*Megaptera novaeangliae*) whales, and matched
known migration timing of gray whales (*Eschrichtius robustus*).
Interannual changes in blue and fin whale calling may relate to the marine
heat wave that began in 2013 and lasted through the end of the monitoring
period. Odontocete detections revealed unique spatial distributions, with
killer whales (*Orcinus orca*) most common on the continental shelf and
sperm whales (*Physeter macrocephalus*) most common on the continental
slope, where detections occurred year-round. Beaked whales showed both
spatial and temporal separation: Baird’s beaked whale (*Berardius bairdii*)
detections were highest at Quinn Seamount in the spring, Cuvier’s (*Ziphius
cavirostris*) at Pratt Seamount in winter, and Stejneger’s (*Mesoplodon
stejnegeri*) on the continental slope in the fall. The year-round presence
of many species highlights the ecological importance of the Gulf of Alaska
and the spatiotemporal information reported here should inform future
conservation efforts.

Available at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-021-03884-1
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-021-03884-1__;!!Mih3wA!XkY4CfIKoPl_RtQT7x189wKBxuazX6inX8mKtWo18OUvZGYSSD2LLZlRoyTvLw$>

Best,
Ally Rice

-- 
Ally Rice
Staff Research Associate II
Scripps Acoustic Ecology Laboratory
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD
office: 858-534-5755
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