To whom it may concern,

On behalf of my co-authors I am happy to announce our new publication in
the Journal of Endangered Species Research, entitled *Geographically
distinct blue whale song variants in the Northeast Pacific. *

Carbaugh-Rutland A, Have Rasmussen J, Sterba-Boatwright B, Širović A (2021)
Geographically distinct blue whale song variants in the Northeast Pacific.
Endang Species Res 46:19-33. https://doi.org/10.3354/esr01145

This article is open access and can be found at the following link:
https://www.int-res.com/articles/esr2021/46/n046p019.pdf
<https://www.int-res.com/articles/esr2021/46/n046p019.pdf>

*Abstract: *
The Northeast Pacific (NEP) population of blue whales Balaenoptera musculus
musculus is currently managed as a single stock. We investigated the
fine-scale frequency characteristics of 1 NEP blue whale song unit, the B
call. We analyzed B calls from passive acoustic data collected between 2010
and 2013 at 2 low-latitude sites, Palmyra Atoll and the Hawaiian Islands,
and 3 higher-latitude sites, off southern California, off Washington state
and in the Gulf of Alaska. Frequency measurements were extracted along the
contour of the third harmonic from each call, and data from each region
were compared. Calls from the Gulf of Alaska and Hawai‘i presented a
downshift in frequency, beginning just past the midway point of the
contour, which was not present in calls recorded from southern California
or Palmyra Atoll. Calls from Washington displayed intermediate
characteristics between those from the other 2 high-latitude sites. Cluster
analysis resulted in consistent grouping of call contours from Washington
and southern California, in what we termed the NEP B1 variant, while
contours from Hawai‘i and the Gulf of Alaska were grouped together, as a
NEP B2 variant. Frequency differences were also observed among the
variants; the Gulf of Alaska displayed the highest frequency on average,
followed by Washington, then southern California. Consistent with other
studies, a yearly decline in the frequency of B calls was also observed.
This discovery of at least 2 geographically distinct variants provides the
first evidence of vocally distinct subpopulations within the NEP,
indicating the possibility of a need for finer-scale population
segmentation.


Thank you for your consideration!
Sincerely,
Alex Carbaugh-Rutland
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