Hi MARMAM community,

On behalf of all co-authors, we are excited to share with you our new 
publication in Marine Mammal Science.

Colson, K. M.,  Pirotta, E.,  New, L.,  Cade, D. E.,  Calambokidis, J.,  
Bierlich, K. C.,  Bird, C. N.,  Ajó, A. F., Hildebrand, L.,  Trites, A. W., &  
Torres, L. G. (2024).  Using accelerometry tags to quantify gray whale foraging 
behavior. Marine Mammal Science, e13210. https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.13210

Abstract:
High-resolution tri-axial accelerometry biologging tags have quantitatively 
described behaviors in baleen whale species that forage using lunges and 
continuous ram filtration. However, detailed quantitative descriptions of 
foraging behaviors do not exist for gray whales, a unique baleen whale species 
that primarily uses benthic suction feeding with a rolling component. We 
deployed suction cup biologging tags on Pacific Coast Feeding Group (PCFG) gray 
whales to quantify foraging behavior at the broad state (dive) and foraging 
tactic (roll event) scales. Hidden Markov models were used to describe three 
distinct states using turn angle, dive duration, pseudotrack tortuosity, and 
presence of roll events that can be interpreted as forage, search, and transit 
behavior. Classification and Regression Tree models best described foraging 
tactics (headstands, benthic digs, and side swims) using median pitch, depth to 
total length ratio, and absolute value of the median roll. On average, PCFG 
gray whales spent more time searching and performed more left-rolled foraging 
tactics at shallower depths at night compared to during the day, potentially to 
track prey above them in the water column. Describing foraging behavior in PCFG 
gray whales enables examination of links between behavioral budgets, 
energetics, and the physiological impact of threats facing this group.

The article is open access and available here: 
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/mms.13210

Cheers,
Clara
(clara.b...@oregonstate.edu)

----
Clara Bird, Ph.D. (she/her)
GEMM Lab | LABARINTO
Marine Mammal Institute
Dept. of Fisheries, Wildlife, & Conservation Sciences
Oregon State University, Hatfield Marine Science Center

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