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Seasonal variability in whale encounters in the Western Antarctic Peninsula

journal contribution
posted on 2004-08-01, 00:00 authored by Deborah Thiele, Ed ChesterEd Chester, S Moore, A Sirovic, J Hildebrand, A Friedlaendar
Cetacean sighting surveys were conducted as part of nine multidisciplinary research cruises over late summer, autumn and winter of 2 years (2001–2003) during the Southern Ocean Global Ocean Ecosystems (SO GLOBEC) program. Sea-ice cover differed markedly between years, with apparent effects on cetacean distribution. No ice was present until late June in 2001, while the previous winter sea ice never fully retreated (>30% cover) during the 2002 or 2003 summer, thus increasing the proportion of thicker and more complex ice, including multi-year floes. Humpback (237 sightings; 537 individuals) and minke (103 sightings: 267 individuals) whales were the most commonly detected species. Data from seven comparable cruises were used to identify habitat for minke and humpback whales over five geographically distinct spatial divisions in the study area. In all years, both species were predominantly found in near coastal habitat, particularly in the fjords where complex habitat likely concentrated prey. In 2002 and 2003 the presence of sea ice provided additional feeding habitat, and the numbers of minkes (in winter) and humpbacks (late summer and autumn) in the area doubled compared with 2001. Humpbacks in particular were concentrated at the ice boundaries during late summer and autumn, while minke numbers increased in the winter that followed and occupied ice-covered areas along the entire shelf edge. Important resource sites for these species are mainly located in near-coastal areas and are used in all years, but when ice margins exist and intersect with resource sites they attract much larger numbers of animals due to the dynamics between sea ice and prey.


History

Journal

Deep sea research part II : topical studies in oceanography

Volume

51

Issue

17-19

Pagination

2311 - 2325

Publisher

Elsevier Science

Location

New York, N.Y.

ISSN

0967-0645

Language

eng

Notes

Cover date Aug-Sept 2004

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, Elsevier Ltd.