Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are excited to share our recent publication titled “The
acoustic presence and migration timing of subarctic baleen whales in the
Bering Strait in relation to environmental factors” published in *Polar
Biology*.

Escajeda, E.D., Stafford, K.M., Woodgate, R.A., and K.L. Laidre*. *2024. The
acoustic presence and migration timing of subarctic baleen whales in the
Bering Strait in relation to environmental factors. *Polar Biology*.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-024-03314-0

The publication can be viewed using the following link:
https://rdcu.be/dXkny

** Abstract **

Subarctic baleen whales, including humpback (*Megaptera novaeangliae*), fin
(*Balaenoptera physalus*), and gray whales (*Eschrichtius robustus*),
migrate through the Bering Strait every summer to feed in the Chukchi Sea.
When and where the whales are found in the region likely reflects
environmental conditions. Using recordings collected between 2009 and 2018
from a hydrophone ~ 35 km north of the strait, we identified whale calls
during the open-water season (May–December), examined migration timing, and
investigated potential drivers of whale presence. The acoustic presence of
fin and humpback whales varied across the years, while gray whales were
consistently detected each year. We compared detection rates for October
and November since these months had recordings each year. We observed the
highest proportion of recordings with humpback whale calls for
October–November in 2009, 2017, and 2018 (66–80% of recordings); the
highest proportion of recordings with fin whale calls in 2015, 2017, and
2018 (75–79% of recordings); and the highest proportion of recordings with
gray whale calls in 2013 and 2015 (46 and 51% of recordings, respectively).
Fin and humpback whales departed the Bering Strait ~ 3 and 2 days later per
year over the study period (*p *< 0.04). Both fin and humpback whales
delayed their southward migration in years with warmer water temperatures
(Pearson *r *≥ 0.73, *p *< 0.02). Generalized additive models of location,
shape, and scale identified day of the year, water temperatures, and the
lagged presence of a thermal front the previous month as drivers of
acoustic presence for all three species during the open-water season.

Please feel free to email with any questions: eescaj...@harveyecology.com

Sincerely,

Erica Escajeda , Ph.D. (she/her)

Ecologist
H. T. Harvey & Associates, Ecological Consultants
eescaj...@harveyecology.com
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