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Whales

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Title: Whales


1
Whales Dolphins
  • Janae Barrett
  • Based on NEAq resources Lowell lectures given
    by John Calembokidis
  • Dr. Scott Kraus

2
Figure 9.1
3
Classification
  • Kingdom Animalia
  • Phylum Chordata
  • Class Mammalia
  • Order Cetacea
  • Suborder Odontoceti- toothed whales dolphins,
    porpoises, sperm whale, killer whale, pilot whale
    beaked whales
  • 1 blow hole opening
  • Suborder Mysticeti- baleen whales
  • Baleen is made of keratin
  • 2 blow hole openings

4
Evolutionary History
  • Evolved from land-dwelling ancestor
  • First mammals arose in Cenozoic Era
  • 65 mya
  • First whales appear 60 mya
  • Seals and walruses 30 mya
  • Sea otters 5 mya

5
Figure 9.18
6
Figure 9.25
7
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8
Echolocation
9
Figure 9.31
10
Diet of Great Whales
11
Impact of Whaling
12
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13
Conservation
  • Some species fall under the National Endangered
    Species Act, 1973
  • All fall under the jurisdiction of the Marine
    Mammal Protection Act passed in 1972
  • States it is a federal offense to kill, capture,
    disturb any marine mammal

14
Right Whales the Right whale to hunt
Why the RIGHT Whale? -Live close to shore
-Floated after killed -Yielded much oil long
baleen plates
15
History
  • Began hunting them 1,000 years ago
  • By 1788, British, French and American ships were
    hunting the Southern Right whales off the South
    African coast. Over the next 30 years an
    estimated 12,000 whales were killed
  • Last right whale killed in US, FL- 1935
  • Really none left in eastern N. Atlantic
  • Individuals have been tracked over time spanning
    whaling whale research eras because they are so
    recognizable
  • Research began in 1979 in Gulf of Maine
  • NMFS surveyed for potential oil refinery in
    Eastport Harbor, ME
  • Found there were far more right whales than they
    expected
  • Oil refinery never built

16
Cataloging Whales
  • Calluses form patterns on head/nose
  • 1. broken callosities
  • 2. continuous callosities
  • 3 main areas
  • Eyebrow
  • Chin
  • Nose
  • Whales are given number identification and
    sometimes names based on the pattern of calluses

17
Callosities -located on head of right whales
identifies individuals helps to give them names.
18
Research Methods
  • 1. Aerial shipboard photo identification
  • Research trips
  • 1980 Bay of Fundy
  • 1983 Scotia Shelf
  • 1984 Southeast US
  • Gather data on distribution, abundance, births,
    deaths movements
  • Have researched historical whaling grounds of
    Labrador, Greenland, Iceland
  • Not many right whales found in these areas
  • Appears they have avoided these regions

19
Right Whale Breaching
20
Movements
  • Winter SE US, for calving, about 1/3 of pop.
  • Spring Cape Cod Bay Great South Channel, for
    spring feeding, about 2/3 of pop.
  • Summer/ Fall Bay of Fundy Scotia Shelf, about
    2/3 of pop.
  • About 1/3 of pop. is always missing
  • Where do they go? Maybe another summering ground?

21
Right Whale mother calf
22
More Research Methods
  • 2. Biopsy darts
  • Only take a sample of blubber
  • Genetic info sex family relationships b/c of
    small pop. Size
  • Contaminants
  • Overall health of individual
  • 3. Ultrasound device (just like human prenatal
    care)
  • Nutrition general health
  • Blubber thickness changes as females become
    pregnant, give birth, lactate

23
More Research Methods
  • 4. Fecal Sampling
  • Began after decline in reproduction in 1990s
  • Fecal masses float in large fields on surface
  • Info on red tides or other biotoxins
  • Disease parasites
  • Reproductive hormones
  • Stress general health

24
Results of Research
  • One of the best known wild populations in world
  • Genetic profiles of many indiv. to construct
    family trees
  • Low genetic diversity (not as low as cheetahs)
    makes pop. vulnerable to crash
  • At least 5 reproductive females made it through
    the population bottleneck following whaling

25
Current Population Size
  • About 350 individuals in N. Atlantic!
  • Problem small pop. size cannot provide good
    statistics to make predictions about this pop.
  • Isolated from all other pops.
  • Cant cross equator b/c thick blubber
  • Other pops. North Pacific (western region)
    southern hemisphere
  • N. A. pop. declining in size due to less
    reproduction increased mortality due to
    shipping fishing
  • Many females not calving, why?
  • 2002- 31 calves, but decline over past 2 years
  • Over the past 20 years average 12 calves/ year
  • Spike years and then steady decline until another
    spike in of calves
  • Females give birth every 3 to 6 years- low
    reproductive rate

26
Protection
  • MMPA- marine mammal protection act
  • Endangered Species Act protects critical habitat
    for these whales- calving grounds
  • 2 regions in Canada
  • 2 regions in US SE US Cape Cod Bay

27
Why low reproductive rate?
  • Feeding nutrition 1 factor that influences
    reproduction in mammals
  • Contaminants eat mostly copepods- low on food
    chain- little bioaccumulation
  • Disease parasites
  • Genetics potential inbreeding
  • Habitat requirements- is it just food that
    matters or are factors like ambient/ human noise
    disrupting their communication behavior?

28
Mortalities
  • 1974-2002 62 deaths
  • 22 from ship collisions
  • 6 from fishing gear
  • 72 of all right whales have gear entanglement
    scars- fostered new research with fishing
    industry to develop new equipment/ techniques
  • Human causes 45
  • 17 unknown cause 27.5
  • 17 natural causes 27.5
  • Not all deaths accounted for

29
Changes in US
  • 2003 moved shipping lanes in Bay of Fundy to
    better avoid areas where right whales congregate
    in spring, summer, fall
  • Parties involved Canada, US, Irving Oil, Dept.
    of Fisheries, NEAq
  • Hit by ships because they are surface feeders
    conduct courtship rituals at the surface
  • Result 95 decrease in probability of a
    collision with a right whale

30
Right Whale showing skimming feeding behavior
Unlike many other baleen whales, Right whales do
not have dorsal fins or pleated throat grooves.
31
Yearly Travels of the Urban Whale
  • Calf born in Jan. off FL/ GA coast
  • Close to shore- about 40 miles offshore
  • 3,000 ships in/out per year in this area
  • Paper mill emissions acid rain offshore
  • Late Feb./ March begin migration north within 40
    miles of shore always
  • Pass by 12 major cities/ ports with lots of
    agricultural runoff shipping noise
  • Norfolk Chesapeake Bay ? Delaware Bay loaded
    with fishing gear and shipping traffic
  • ?NYC harbor pharmaceutical runoff hormones
    increase in effluent, not treated in sewage
    birth control hormones in ocean! Is this
    affecting the whales?
  • Providence? Buzzards Bay ? Cape Cod Bay ? Gulf of
    Maine ? Bay of Fundy drastic increase in fishing
    gear and ship traffic in summer months when they
    are up in this area

32
The Blue Whale The Largest Creature to live on
Earth
33
Balaenoptera musculus
34
Cascadia Research on the Blue Whale
  • Began research in 1986 while studying Humpbacks
    off of CA
  • Big target in commerical whaling, thought to be
    virtually wiped out
  • Led to long term research in Pacific
  • Types of data collected
  • Photo ID
  • Tagging
  • Feeding
  • Abundance
  • Movements
  • Vocalization recordings

35
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36
Not much of a catalog of indiv. unlike many other
whale species
37
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38
Research Methods
  • Use small boats- 20 ft or less
  • Lower cost
  • Maneuverable
  • Quick to relocate
  • Ability to approach closely
  • Research area from British Columbia to Baja
  • Photo ID
  • Most photos of tail fluke mottling pattern on
    dorsal side and fluke
  • Have identified a pale while indiv. not sure if
    its an albino

39
Where are the Whales?
  • Coordinated research on Humpbacks in N. Pacific
    has produced much data on blue whales
  • Research cruise found blue whales in areas that
    they hadnt been typically found in for decades
    (former whaling grounds)
  • Shift in migration pattern
  • Pre-whaling- often in Gulf of Alaska little
    time in CA waters
  • Post-whaling- shows reverse pattern
  • Today often found in area called Costa Rica Dome
    off of Mexico and CR, identified area in 1999
  • Some stay here year-round and dont migrate
  • CA blue whales migrate here for winter
  • Jan-March about 1400
  • June- August about 200-600
  • About 1500 indiv. identified in CA waters
  • May be whales migrating here from S. Pacific
    Southern Ocean
  • Total estimate in Eastern N. Pacific- about
    2,000- much more than previously thought!

40
NOAA map of blue whale tags in Pacific Northwest
41
Vocalizations
  • Largest animal on Earth loudest low frequency
    sounds- most of it we cant hear
  • Can travel the longest distances- 1,000 km!
  • Call Types
  • A deep, low, repetitive thudding
  • B low, descending rumble
  • D- short, low rumble
  • A B- mostly males
  • D- both genders, assoc. with feeding
  • We can identify the whale species by the song,
    but its harder to determine the indiv. based on
    the song
  • To solve this problem tag the animal and record
    songs
  • What does it mean when they arent calling? Why
    does call rate/ types vary through the year?
    trying to answer these ?s by correlations to
    behavior

42
Blue Whale Songs
  • Some whales call regularly- very few do this
  • Mostly migrating individuals, not feeding
  • Most whales are irregular callers
  • b/c most are engaged in feeding
  • Harder to call when engaged in deep diving
  • Very little air to produce a sound

43
Sonar Vocalizations
  • Navys low freq. sonar is in this range- may
    affect whales?
  • Navy hydrophone techs were 1st to hear describe
    whale songs determine they were, in fact, made
    by animals
  • Air gun array produces 263 dB
  • LFA- low frequency active- 240 dB
  • Navy mid-freq. sonar- 235 dB
  • Has been implicated in mass strandings of
    Cuviers beaked whales in 1996 2002

44
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45
Aerial View of a Blue Whale
Blue Whale Breaching the Surface
46
Tagging Research
  • 1. Movement
  • Visible tags
  • VHF
  • Satellite
  • Deployed into blubber- more invasive good
    tracking of a year in some cases
  • 2. Behavior
  • TDR- time depth recorders
  • Cameras other instruments
  • 3. Physiological measurements
  • 4. Acoustic Tags

47
More Tagging
  • Non-invasive tag for diving pressure sensor
  • Natl Geo Crittercam hi 8 video, hydrophone,
    pressure
  • Film 2-3 hours, releases, pick up
  • Secured by suction cups

48
Crittercam Data
  • Krill usually around 60 m down in layer during
    summertime
  • Records feeding/ diving behavior
  • Whales dive below the krill then up down into
    the layer several times
  • Dives to 300 m have been recorded
  • Krill layer shifts during the day
  • Shallow at night
  • Deeper during the day
  • Can range in depth from 300 m to 10 m

49
Crittercam continued
  • Even though there is nothing to see on the film
    because there is no light at these depths the
    sound of water turbulence tells them what the
    whale is doing as far as how fast it is swimming,
    etc.
  • Natl Geo. was disappointed with the film footage
    because most of diving was pitch black

50
Bioacoustic Senors
  • Stay on longer than other probes
  • High quality audio secured by suction cups
  • Pick up after 1 day
  • Records depth, pitch, roll of whales movements
  • steep dive, about 80 angle, very few fluke
    beats- mostly gliding down
  • must beat flukes a lot when they ascend b/c
    lungs are empty (no buoyancy)
  • lungs collapse, about 100 m, force air out of
    lungs push oxygen into tissues so they can sink
    glide down on the dive

51
Just after a gulp of tasty krill in shallow water
52
Diving Pattern
  • Shallow, resting depths at night
  • Active diving during the day
  • Do not participate in any kind of cooperative
    feeding behavior like Humpbacks other cetaceans
    even when seen in male/female pairs

53
Mother calf from above
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