Dear all,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am pleased to share a new publication on the
development of a short, consolidated satellite tag for implantation in the
blubber of right whales. This tag is also an option for smaller baleen
whale species such as minke, sei and Bryde's whales.

Zerbini, A. N., S. Fernández, S. Fermepin, et al. 2026. Development of a
Short, Integrated, Consolidated Satellite Tag Designed to Anchor in the
Blubber of Right Whales (*Eubalaena* spp.). Marine Mammal Science 42, no.
2: e70130. https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.70130.

Abstract:
Right whales (genus *Eubalaena*) are among the most endangered baleen
whales in the world. Investigating their spatial ecology and movement
patterns is essential to assess their vulnerability to anthropogenic
threats and to promote management and conservation. Satellite tagging has
been established as a powerful tool to understand cetacean habitat use, but
invasive tag configurations have raised concerns about the potential for
health impact on tagged individuals, especially for endangered species. In
this study, the development and application of new fully integrated,
consolidated tags designed to anchor in the blubber of right whales is
described. SPOT-177S (n = 29) and SPOT-396 (n = 9) tag designs were
deployed in southern right whales (*Eubalaena australis*) in Argentina. Tag
duration ranged from approximately 11–50 days (average = 24 days). No
statistical differences in transmission duration were found across sex,
demographic category (mothers with calves and solitary animals), year, and
tag design. In addition, the use of a polydopamine antimicrobial coating
did not contribute significantly to improving tag duration. These shorter,
right whale “blubber-only” tags fill a gap between percutaneous instruments
with external electronics and those that are fully implanted but anchor
below the blubber-muscle interface. Therefore, they represent a less
invasive tool for research questions on right whale movements and habitat
use that can be answered with transmission durations of 2–7 weeks. These
new instruments may also be applicable as a subfascial design for smaller
baleen whale species with relatively thin blubber layers.

The paper is available here:
https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.70130

If you want the pdf, please send me an email at the address below.

Best wishes,

Alex Zerbini

-- 
Alexandre N. Zerbini, PhD
Senior Scientist and Principal Investigator
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean and Ecosystem Studies
University of Washington
Seattle, WA, USA
email: [email protected]
ph: +1 206-351-7311
url: https://cicoes.uw.edu/research/principal-investigators/alex-zerbini/
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to