Dear MARMAM Community
On behalf of my co-authors, I am happy to announce the recent publication of 
our work: Shabangu, F.W., Hlati K., van den Berg M.A., Lamont T., and Kirkman 
S.P. 2025. “Monthly and Diel Acoustic Occurrence of Four Baleen Whale Species 
in South African Waters.” Ecology and Evolution 15, no. 8: e72004. 
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.72004

Abstract
Understanding of the spatio-temporal occurrence of cetaceans post the whaling 
era is essential for protecting and improving management strategies of these 
marine mammals. To determine the monthly and diel acoustic occurrence of four 
baleen whale species relative to environmental conditions off the west coast of 
South Africa, we collected passive acoustic monitoring data within Child's Bank 
marine protected area in January and May through October 2024 at various water 
depths. Burst tonal calls of the southern African Bryde's whale offshore 
population were detected in January and May through July with the highest 
occurrence in January. Humpback whale songs and southern right whale gunshot 
sounds were detected from May through October with high occurrence in September 
and with smaller modes in other months. Antarctic minke whale bioduck calls 
were also found in June through October, showing high occurrence in August 
through October. Calls from an unknown source with similar characteristics to 
Antarctic minke whale bioduck calls were present in May, July, and August with 
the highest occurrence in August. Diel acoustic occurrence of Bryde's, southern 
right, Antarctic minke, and minke-like whale calls indicated that these animals 
vocalised more during the day while humpback whales were more vocally active at 
night. Sea surface height and sea surface temperature, either separately or in 
combination, were the most important predictors of whale acoustic occurrence, 
highlighting the influence of environmental conditions on the distribution, 
habitat selection, and ecology of these whales. Overall, this study advances 
our understanding of the movement, occurrence, and behavioural patterns of 
several baleen whales relative to environmental conditions. It also provides 
the first description of the southern African Bryde's whale offshore 
population's call characteristics, which will be useful at guiding future 
studies to acoustically differentiate between it and the inshore population.

The full paper is openly accessible via this link: 
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ece3.72004
Best,Fannie   
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Fannie W. Shabangu, PhD (He/Him/His)
Marine BiologistDepartment of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment
Cape Town, South AfricaEmail addresses: [email protected]; 
[email protected] Mobile: +27 74 220 0210
Tel: +27 21 402 3553
Research Fellow
Mammal Research InstituteWhale Unit
University of PretoriaHatfield, South Africa

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