Colleagues,

On behalf of my co-authors, and with special recognition of our
collaborators in the Gitga'at First Nation, I share news of this recent
publication:

Keen EM, Pilkington J, O’Mahony É, Thompson K-L, Hendricks B, Robinson N,
Alidina H, Meuter. H, Picard CR, Wray J. (2021) Fin whales of the Great
Bear Rainforest: *Balaenoptera physalus velifera* in a Canadian Pacific
fjord system. PLoS ONE 16(9): e0256815.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0256815

Abstract
Fin whales (*Balaenoptera physalus*) are widely considered an offshore and
oceanic species, but certain populations also use coastal areas and
semi-enclosed seas. Based upon fifteen years of study, we report that
Canadian Pacific fin whales (*B*. *p*. *velifera*) have returned to the
Kitimat Fjord System (KFS) in the Great Bear Rainforest, and have
established a seasonally resident population in its intracoastal waters.
This is the only fjord system along this coast or elsewhere in which fin
whales are known to occur regularly with strong site fidelity. The KFS was
also the only Canadian Pacific fjord system in which fin whales were
commonly found and killed during commercial whaling, pointing to its
long-term importance. Traditional knowledge, whaling records, and citizen
science databases suggest that fin whales were extirpated from this area
prior to their return in 2005–2006. Visual surveys and mark-recapture
analysis documented their repopulation of the area, with 100–120 whales
using the fjord system in recent years, as well as the establishment of a
seasonally resident population with annual return rates higher than 70%.
Line transect surveys identified the central and outer channels of the KFS
as the primary fin whale habitat, with the greatest densities occurring in
Squally Channel and Caamaño Sound. Fin whales were observed in the KFS in
most months of the year. Vessel- and shore-based surveys (27,311 km and
6,572 hours of effort, respectively) indicated regular fin whale presence
(2,542 detections), including mother-calf pairs, from June to October and
peak abundance in late August–early September. Seasonal patterns were
variable year-to-year, and several lines of evidence indicated that fin
whales arrived and departed from the KFS repeatedly throughout the summer
and fall. Additionally, we report on the population’s social network and
morphometrics. These findings offer insights into the dynamics of
population recovery in an area where several marine shipping projects are
proposed. The fin whales of the Great Bear Rainforest represent a rare
exception to general patterns in this species’ natural history, and we
highlight the importance of their conservation.

A PDF of this paper is available open-source from PLoS ONE:
https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0256815

Best wishes,

Eric Keen
ericmk...@gmail.com
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