4.2 Article

Seasonal diving and foraging behaviour of Eastern Canada-West Greenland bowhead whales

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 643, Issue -, Pages 197-217

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps13356

Keywords

Balaena mysticetus; Feeding ecology; Zooplankton; State-space modeling; Dive analysis; Satellite telemetry

Funding

  1. Fisheries and Oceans Canada (Emerging Fisheries)
  2. Nunavut Wildlife Research Trust Fund
  3. Nunavut General Monitoring Program
  4. Ocean Tracking Network
  5. University of Manitoba
  6. ArcticNet Centre of Excellence award
  7. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Canadian Graduate Scholarship
  8. Northern Scientific Training Program (Canadian Polar Commission)
  9. UBC-Affiliated Fellowship
  10. W. Gar field Weston Award for Northern Research award
  11. Molson Foundation award

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Climate change may affect the foraging success of bowhead whales Balaena mysticetus by altering the diversity and abundance of zooplankton species available as food. However, assessing climate-induced impacts first requires documenting feeding conditions under current environmental conditions. We collected seasonal movement and dive-behaviour data from 25 Eastern Canada-West Greenland bowheads instrumented with time-depth telemetry tags and used state-space models to examine whale movements and dive behaviours. Zooplankton samples were also collected in Cumberland Sound (CS) to determine species composition and biomass. We found that CS was used seasonally by 14 of the 25 tagged whales. Area-restricted movement was the dominant behaviour in CS, suggesting that the tagged whales allocated considerable time to feeding. Prey sampling data suggested that bowheads were exploiting energy-rich Arctic copepods such as Calanus glacialis and C. hyperboreus during summer. Dive behaviour changed seasonally in CS. Most notably, probable feeding dives were substantially shallower during spring and summer compared to fall and winter. These seasonal changes in dive depths likely reflect changes in the vertical distribution of calanoid copepods, which are known to suspend development and overwinter at depth during fall and winter when availability of their phytoplankton prey is presumed to be lower. Overall, CS appears to be an important year-round foraging habitat for bowheads, but is particularly important during the late summer and fall. Whether CS will remain a reliable feeding area for bowhead whales under climate change is not yet known.

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