Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are happy to share our recent publication at the Journal of 
Cetacean Research and Management as detailed below.

Seyboth, E, S. Paarman, C. Allison, J-O. Meynecke, J. de Bie, K.P. Findlay 
(2024). A review of Southern Hemisphere humpback whaling by period and catch 
location. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management, 25, 123-162. 
https://doi.org/10.47536/jcrm.v25i1.859

Abstract: Comprehensive Assessments of the seven Southern Hemisphere humpback 
whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) breeding stocks require an understanding of 
their respective catch histories. A lack of information on humpback whale 
catches from American, British and French open‐boat (or pre‐modern) pelagic and 
land‐based whaling from 1760 to the late 1920s from some fleets precludes 
detailed estimations of catch histories from this era. We therefore provide a 
review of the whaling of the species across the Southern Hemisphere by modern 
whaling period, during which some 215,928 humpback whales are estimated to have 
been taken between 1903 and 1973, comprising land‐based, moored floating 
factory, and both regulated and unregulated illegal pelagic whaling. Between 
1904 and 1914, humpback whales were the main catch at South Georgia and the 
South Shetland Islands, while, at further Southern Ocean land stations, catch 
efforts were carried out from the South Orkney, the South Sandwich and 
Kerguelen Archipelagos, with more limited success. Off the coasts of South 
America, humpback whales were taken off the west coast and from the Brazilian 
coast between 1905 and 1963. Southern African catch records show extensive 
humpback catches from whaling stations across the coast from Madagascar to 
Gabon from 1908 to 1963, as do catch records from Australia and New Zealand 
across the same period. A rapid growth in pelagic whaling across the Southern 
Ocean from 1923 onwards resulted in extensive humpback catches until 1963, 
despite significant temporal and spatial restrictions. Although humpback whales 
were totally protected across the Southern Hemisphere by the International 
Whaling Commission from October 1963, the Soviet Union fleets violated catch 
and reporting regulations from 1947 to 1973, resulting in significant illegal 
catches. Additional unregulated catches were made by the Olympic Challenger 
fleet between 1950 and 1955 in the Antarctic and off the west coast of South 
America. The information compiled in this review is critical to the evaluation 
of the whaling impact on each breeding stock, and for future status assessments 
of the species, and can provide evidence of the historical distributions of the 
species in breeding and feeding grounds.


Please reach out if you are interested in discussing the topic: 
elisa.seyb...@up.ac.za


With best wishes,
Elisa.



--
Dr Elisa Seyboth

Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Mammal Research Institute Whale Unit
Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences
University of Pretoria, South Africa

Collaborating Researcher
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande - FURG - Brazil

Tel.: +27 082 420 2047
www.researchgate.net/profile/Elisa_Seyboth<http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Elisa_Seyboth><http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Elisa_Seyboth>
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