Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Skip to main content
Diego Filun

    Diego Filun

    Universität Bremen, Biology, Graduate Student
    Antarctic minke whales (Baleanoptera bonaerensis) occur in open as well as ice-covered waters throughout the Southern Ocean. Their low visual detectability and ice-associated habitat makes the species difficult to study using traditional... more
    Antarctic minke whales (Baleanoptera bonaerensis) occur in open as well as ice-covered waters throughout the Southern Ocean. Their low visual detectability and ice-associated habitat makes the species difficult to study using traditional visual methods. The recent identification of vocalizations produced by Antarctic minke whales now allows the use of passive acoustic records to investigate spatio-temporal patterns in occurrence, also in areas that are (seasonally) inaccessible to ships due to extensive ice cover. Here we present preliminary results on Antarctic minke whale occurrence patterns based on part of a multi-year passive acoustic data set collected from 6 locations throughout the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean. These comprised four autonomous passive acoustic recorders which collected data along the Greenwich meridian between 2008 and 2011, one passive acoustic recorder in the Weddell Sea that collected data between 2010 and 2012 and long-term recordings from the PA...
    The recent identification of the bio-duck call as Antarctic minke whale (AMW) vocalization allows the use of passive acoustic monitoring to retrospectively investigate year-round spatial-temporal patterns in minke whale occurrence in... more
    The recent identification of the bio-duck call as Antarctic minke whale (AMW) vocalization allows the use of passive acoustic monitoring to retrospectively investigate year-round spatial-temporal patterns in minke whale occurrence in ice-covered areas. Here, we present an analysis of AMW occurrence patterns based on a 9-year passive acoustic dataset (2008–2016) from 21 locations throughout the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean (Weddell Sea). AMWs were detected acoustically at all mooring locations from May to December, with the highest presence between August and November (bio-duck calls present at more than 80% of days). At the southernmost recording locations, the bio-duck call was present up to 10 months of the year. Substantial inter-annual variation in the seasonality of vocal activity correlated to variation in local ice concentration. Our analysis indicates that part of the AMW population stays in the Weddell Sea during austral winter. The period with the highest acoustic...