Hi

My coauthor and myself would like to share with the MARMAM community a recent 
publication in Frontiers in Remote Sensing about sperm whales in the Ross Sea. 
The pdf can be found at the following link

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsen.2023.940627/full.


TITLE:

Sperm whales forage year-round in the Ross sea region


ABSTRACT:

We investigated the seasonal and spatial occurrence of sperm whale (Physeter 
macrocephalus) in the Ross Sea region of the Southern Ocean derived from 
passive acoustic data. Two Autonomous Multichannel Acoustic Recorders (AMARs) 
moored about 10 m above the seabed were deployed in the austral summer of 2018 
and recovered 1 year later. The northern AMAR (A3) was located on the 
Pacific-Antarctic Ridge at 63.7°S and the southern AMAR (A1) at 73.1°S on the 
Iselin Bank, part of the continental slope of the Ross Sea. Sperm whale 
echolocation signals were detected using signal processing scripts and 
validated by visual inspection of spectrograms. Our results demonstrate that 
sperm whales are present in the Ross Sea region year-round. At A1, sperm whale 
vocalisations were detected in every month between February and November, but 
absent in December and January. Whales were detected most often in February 
with an average of 0.310 detections per hour. Sperm whale vocalisations were 
detected at station A3 in every month except February when we had no 
observations. Our results contrast to a paucity of reported sightings of sperm 
whales from fishing and research vessels in the Ross Sea region between 
December and February. Probabilities of detecting sperm whales at A3 were on 
average 14.2 times higher than at A1 for the same month and monthly mean 
detections per hour were an average of 74.4 times higher at A3 than A1. At A1, 
we found a significant preference for day-time foraging rather than during the 
night or nautical twilight. In contrast, at A3, no clear day/dusk/night/dawn 
differences in sperm whale occurrence were found. Low sea-ice concentration (< 
80%) and open water within ∼50 km were necessary but not sufficient conditions 
for higher detection rates of sperm whales (>0.1 detections per hour). Overall, 
our research provides baseline information on sperm whale occurrence and 
establishes a method to track long-term change to help evaluate the 
conservation value of the Ross Sea region Marine Protected Area.




Cheers,

Giacomo

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