Dear All,

My coauthors and I are pleased to announce the publication of our recent paper:

Owen K, Jenner KCS, Jenner MNM, McCauley RD, Andrews RD (2018) Water 
temperature correlates with baleen whale foraging behaviour at multiple scales 
in the Antarctic. Marine and Freshwater Research doi.org/10.1071/MF17288

Abstract
How baleen whales locate prey and how environmental change may influence whale 
foraging success are not well understood. Baleen whale foraging habitat has 
largely been described at a population level, yet population responses to 
change are the result of individual strategies across multiple scales. This 
study aimed to determine how the foraging behaviour of individual whales varied 
relative to environmental conditions along their movement path. Biotelemetry 
devices provided information on humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) 
movement at two spatial scales in East Antarctica, and a mixed modelling 
approach was used at a medium scale (tens of kilometres) to determine which 
environmental factors correlated with a change in foraging behaviour. Water 
temperature was linked to a change in foraging behaviour at both spatial 
scales. At the medium scale, warmer water was associated with the resident 
state, commonly assumed to represent periods of foraging behaviour. However, 
fine-scale analyses suggested that cooler water was associated with a higher 
feeding rate. Variation in whale foraging behaviour with changes in water 
temperature adds support to the hypothesis that whales may be able to track 
environmental conditions to find prey. Future research should investigate this 
pattern further, given the predicted rise in water temperatures under 
climate-change scenarios.

It is available online here: http://www.publish.csiro.au/mf/MF17288

Kind regards
Kylie Owen


_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to