4.2 Article

Associations between North Pacific right whales and their zooplanktonic prey in the southeastern Bering Sea

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 490, Issue -, Pages 267-284

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps10457

Keywords

Eubalaena japonica; Right whale; Calanus marshallae; Calanus glacialis; Bering Sea; Baleen whale; Resuspension; Phytodetritus

Funding

  1. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management [M07RG13267 (AKC 063)]
  2. US Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), as part of the MMS Alaska Environmental Studies Program

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Due to the seriously endangered status of North Pacific right whales Eubalaena japonica, an improved understanding of the environmental factors that influence the species' distribution and occurrence is needed to better assess the effects of climate change and industrial activities on the population. Associations among right whales, zooplankton, and the physical environment were examined in the southeastern Bering Sea during the summers of 2008 and 2009. Sampling with nets, an optical plankton counter, and a video plankton recorder in proximity to whales as well as along cross-isobath surveys indicated that the copepod Calanus marshallae is the primary prey of right whales in this region. Acoustic detections of right whales from sonobuoys deployed during the cross-isobath surveys were strongly associated with C. marshallae abundance, and peak abundance estimates of C. marshallae in 2.5 m depth strata near a tagged right whale ranged as high as 10(6) copepods m(-3). The smaller Pseudocalanus spp. was higher in abundance than C. marshallae in proximity to right whales, but significantly lower in biomass. High concentrations of C. marshallae occurred in both the surface and bottom layers of the highly stratified water column, but there was no evidence of diel vertical migration. Instead, occurrence of C. marshallae in the bottom layer was associated with elevated near-bottom light attenuance and chlorophyll fluorescence, suggesting C. marshallae may aggregate at depth while feeding on resuspended phytodetritus. Despite the occasional presence of strong horizontal gradients in hydrographic properties, no association was found between C. marshallae and either fronts or phytoplankton distribution.

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