Hello MARMAM,

My co-authors and I are pleased to announce the open access publication of
our manuscript "Redefining North Atlantic right whale habitat-use patterns
under climate change" in Limnology and Oceanography.

Meyer-Gutbrod, E.L., Davies, K.T.A.D., Johnson, C.L., Plourde, S.,
Sorochan, K.A., Kenney, R.D., Christian Ramp, Gosselin, J.F., Lawson, J.W.,
Greene, C.H. 2022. Redefining North Atlantic right whale habitat-use
patterns under climate change. Limnology & Oceanography.
https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.12242

The publication is freely available here:
https://doi.org/10.1002/lno.12242

Abstract
Changes in the physical oceanography of the Northwest Atlantic stemming
from both natural and anthropogenic climate change impact the foraging
ecology and distribution of endangered North Atlantic right whales. In this
study, right whale sightings from 1990 to 2018 were analyzed to examine
decadal patterns in monthly habitat use in 12 high-use areas.
Depth-integrated abundances of late-stage Calanus finmarchicus and Calanus
hyperboreus were also analyzed for decadal variations in the right whale
foraging habitats. There were significant differences in the occurrence,
seasonal timing, and persistence of foraging habitats across these three
decades. In the decades of the 1990s and the 2010s, prey was less abundant
than in the 2000s, corresponding to reduced use of the Southeast US calving
grounds in the winter, increased use of Cape Cod Bay in winter and spring,
and reduced use of Roseway Basin in the fall. In the 2010s, right whale
sightings increased in Southern New England and the Gulf of St. Lawrence in
the spring and summer, respectively. Summertime declines in the 2010s in
late-stage copepod abundances in the Gulf of Maine and surrounding regions,
as well as in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, indicate that recent increased use
of the Gulf of St. Lawrence is driven by a decline in prey in traditional
foraging habitats rather than by an increase in prey in the new foraging
habitat. This analysis of decadal-scale differences in right whale
sightings and prey abundance is critical for redefining right whale
distribution patterns for the most recent (post-2010) decade.

Please contact me if you have any questions. Thanks!

Cheers,
Erin Meyer-Gutbrod
-- 
Dr. Erin L. Meyer-Gutbrod *(she/her)*
Assistant Professor
School of the Earth, Ocean & Environment
University of South Carolina
https://meyer-gutbrod.weebly.com/

emgutb...@seoe.sc.edu
216-548-9082
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