Dear colleagues,

On behalf of my co-authors, I'm pleased to share our new publication in
PLOS ONE, "Drone-based observations of scarring patterns in humpback whales
(*Megaptera novaeangliae*) in the New York Bight provide insight into
foraging behavior and anthropogenic threats".

Authors: Siobhan Keeling, Chelsi Napoli, Joshua Meza-Fidalgo, Julia
Stepanuk, Nathan Hirtle, Zachary Hoffman, Lesley Thorne

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0324121

Abstract: Large whales face a range of threats, including vessel strikes
and entanglement in fishing gear. Elevated humpback whale mortality,
predominantly in juveniles, has occurred in the Northeast US since 2016.
The New York Bight, a region with dense shipping and fishing vessel
traffic, has become a hotspot for these strandings. Scarring patterns can
provide information on anthropogenic threats, as well as predation and
behavior. We used drone imagery to examine scarring reflective of
entanglements, vessel strikes, killer whale interactions and bottom feeding
in both juvenile and adult humpback whales in the New York Bight. The vast
majority of both adult (87.1%) and juvenile (86.8%) humpbacks showed
entanglement scars, indicating that humpbacks frequently interact with
fishing gear across age classes. Vessel strike scars were observed more
frequently in juvenile whales (14.2%) than in adults (2.2%), in contrast to
prior observations north of our study area in the Gulf of Maine, though the
difference was of borderline significance (mean p-value 0.051, Fisher’s
Exact tests on 1000 bootstrapped populations incorporating uncertainty in
length measurements). These results support previous suggestions that
juvenile humpbacks in the New York Bight may be particularly vulnerable to
vessel strike due to inshore and surface feeding, and suggest that vessel
strike scars may be obtained locally. Killer whales are thought to
primarily target young animals, and killer whale scars were observed more
often in juveniles (11.6%) than adults (4.4%), though this difference was
not significant (mean p-value 0.26). Jaw scuffing indicative of bottom
feeding was observed more frequently in adults (68.9%) than in juveniles
(27.4%; mean p-value 3.47 x 10−5), suggesting that this behavior is
acquired as whales mature. Our findings underscore differences in behavior
between adult and juvenile humpback whales and highlight the exposure of
humpback whales to anthropogenic threats in heavily urbanized coastal
regions.

Best,
Lesley

......................................................

*Lesley Thorne*

*Associate Professor and Associate Dean for Research*

*School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences*

*Stony Brook University*

Office: 631.632.5117

www.thornelab.com  <http://www.thornelab.com>

[image: Stony Brook University logo] <http://www.stonybrook.edu/>
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to