Dear Colleagues,
The scientific article 'Occurrence of cetaceans and seabirds along the Indian 
Ocean 110°E meridian from temperate to tropical waters' is published in the 
journal Deep Sea Research (Part II, Topical Studies in Oceanography), Special 
issue- Revisiting 110°E. You can request on Research Gate or download the pdf 
from this link: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2022.105184

Authors: Kate R. Sprogis, Alicia Sutton, Micheline Jenner, Rob McCauley, Curt 
Jenner.

Abstract: The first extensive physical and biological observations of the 
Indian Ocean were made from 1959 to 1965, during a ship-based International 
Indian Ocean Expedition (IIOE-1). Decades later in 2019, the 110°E meridian was 
revisited during the second International Indian Ocean Expedition (IIOE-2). The 
aim of this study, as part of a large number of related studies, was to examine 
the occurrence of cetaceans and seabirds along the 110°E meridian from 
temperate to tropical waters (39.5 to 11.5°S). Cetaceans and seabirds were 
actively scanned for across a four-week period spanning austral autumn to 
winter. Acoustic recordings of vocalising cetaceans were made using directional 
and omnidirectional sonobuoys (n = 87 deployments). In total, seven cetacean 
sightings (six baleen whale, one toothed whale), 186 seabird sightings and 242 
cetacean acoustic detections were recorded. The baleen whale species detected 
acoustically were assigned to Antarctic blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus 
intermedia; Z-calls), pygmy blue whales (B. m. brevicauda; south east Indian 
Ocean 3-component calls, D-calls), fin whales (B. physalus; 20 Hz-pulses), 
southern right whales (Eubalaena australis; upcalls), Antarctic minke whales 
(B. bonaerensis; bio-duck calls) and an unknown signal; a "spot call". The 
toothed whale species detected acoustically were Kogia sperm whales (Kogia sp.) 
and delphinid whilstes. Pygmy blue whales were detected across Subantarctic to 
Tropical Surface Waters, and were the most commonly detected cetacean. There 
was some delineation in other cetaceans: the spot call was detected in 
Subantarctic and Subtropical Surface Water (south of 23°S); fin whales in 
Subtropical Surface Water (between 23° and 30.5°S); and Antarctic minke whales 
in Tropical Surface Water (between 14° and 23°S). Data were not collected on 
cetaceans during IIOE-1, so data here represent baseline occurrence along 110°E 
for future studies. A total of 22 seabird species were sighted, including, 
petrels, storm petrels, albatrosses, tropicbirds, terns, shearwaters, boobies, 
frigatebirds, gannets, gulls, skuas and prions. Soft-plumaged petrels 
(Pterodroma mollis) were observed across all water masses and were the most 
commonly sighted seabird. There was some delineation of seabird species; 
albatrosses were sighted south of the Subtropical Front (south of 32°S); 
flesh-footed shearwaters (Ardenna carneipes) in Subantarctic and Subtropical 
Surface Waters (south of 27°S); and tropicbirds in Tropical Surface Water 
(north of 20°S). The occurrence of highly mobile species is particularly 
important to investigate as the waters in the eastern Indian Ocean have been 
warming faster than in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans.

Reference: Sprogis, K.R., Sutton, A.L., Jenner, M.-N., McCauley, R.D., Jenner, 
K.C.S., 2022. Occurrence of cetaceans and seabirds along the Indian Ocean 110°E 
meridian from temperate to tropical waters. Deep Sea Research (Part II, Topical 
Studies in Oceanography). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dsr2.2022.105184

Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions.

Kind regards,

Kate, Alicia, Micheline, Rob and Curt.
Kate Sprogis, PhD
Research Fellow
Great Southern Marine Research Facility
Albany campus WA 6330 Australia
kate.spro...@uwa.edu.au
[UWA on Twitter]<https://twitter.com/KateSprogis>[UWA on 
Instagram]<https://www.instagram.com/katesprogis/>[UWA on Linked 
In]<linkedin.com/in/kate-sprogis-23abb58b>[cid:image005.png@01D8D1C8.E9C3D760]<http://www.katesprogis.wordpress.com/>
[cid:image006.png@01D8D1C8.E9C3D760]
[cid:image007.jpg@01D8D1C8.E9C3D760]
We acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of Noongar Country and pay our 
respects to the custodians of the land and sea on which we live and work.

Recent publications:

  *   Arranz, P., N. A. de Soto, P. T. Madsen, and K. R. Sprogis. 2021a. 
Whale-watch vessel noise levels with applications to whale-watching guidelines 
and conservation. Marine Policy 134:104776. doi: 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104776
  *   Arranz, P., M. Glarou, and K. R. Sprogis. 2021b. Decreased resting and 
nursing in short-finned pilot whales when exposed to louder petrol engine noise 
of a hybrid whale-watch vessel. Scientific Reports 11:21195. doi: 
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-00487-0

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

Reply via email to