Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent open access publication on 
northern bottlenose whale occurrence in the Icelandic and Norwegian Sea:

Haas, C. E., Miller, P. J., Hooker, S. K., Svavarsson, J., Macrander, A., Lam, 
F. P. A., & Wensveen, P. J. (2026). Spatiotemporal occurrence of northern 
bottlenose whales (Hyperoodon ampullatus) within the Nordic Seas based upon 
passive acoustic monitoring. Marine Biology, 173(3), 48. 
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-026-04798-6

Abstract
Northern bottlenose whales (Hyperoodon ampullatus) are echolocating, 
deep-diving beaked whales found primarily in arctic and sub-arctic offshore 
waters. In the eastern North Atlantic, the species has been suggested to 
undergo seasonal north–south migrations, however, previous whaling data and 
more recent sighting surveys insufficiently covered the winter months. To 
address this data gap, bottom-moored hydrophone deployments (n = 8) were 
conducted at three locations in the Nordic Seas: off Jan Mayen (Norway; 
2015–2017), north-east Iceland (2020–2022) and east Iceland (2020–2023). 
Automated click detection allowed identification of species-specific clicks. 
Detector precision and recall were manually evaluated using subsets of the data 
and precision was used to correct the weekly proportion of snapshots that 
contained clicks. Generalized additive mixed models were used to investigate 
whether environmental variables associated with prey availability explained 
occurrence patterns. Results revealed near year-round presence of northern 
bottlenose whales in the Nordic Seas with a gradual northward shift in spring 
between Iceland and Jan Mayen. The lowest numbers of detections occurred from 
July into September, contradicting the long-standing hypothesis of north–south 
migrations to enable overwintering at lower latitudes. The observed seasonal 
occurrence patterns were stable across years and associated with higher sea 
surface height variation, indicative of eddy activity. We interpreted this as 
support of a prey-driven distribution, as eddies characterize the spawning 
grounds of northern bottlenose whales’ main squid prey in the Nordic Seas, 
Gonatus fabricii. The observed occurrence patterns can inform planning of 
future anthropogenic activities in these waters to avoid habitat degradation 
and reduce stressors on this species.

Please feel free to reach out if you have any questions.

Best wishes,
Caroline Haas

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