4.1 Article

Abundance and distribution of Antarctic blue whales Balaenoptera musculus intermedia off the Queen Maud Land coast of Antarctica

Journal

AFRICAN JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 53-59

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.2989/1814232X.2020.1864471

Keywords

baleen whale; distance sampling; endangered species; Southern Ocean; vessel survey; whale conservation

Funding

  1. South African National Antarctic Programme (SANAP)

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The Antarctic blue whale was hunted to near extinction in the 20th century, leading to a lack of current data on its abundance and distribution. Recent surveys have shown that the population is less than 1% of the original pre-whaling size, with the Queen Maud Land coast of Antarctica having significantly higher blue whale densities. New estimates of abundance are crucial for assessing the conservation status and monitoring the recovery of the Antarctic blue whale population.
The Antarctic blue whale Balaenoptera musculus intermedia was hunted to near extinction in the twentieth century. Current data on the abundance and distribution of the species are lacking owing to the difficulty and expense of surveys under adverse weather conditions in open-ocean habitats, and to the small population size. The most recently accepted global abundance estimate, based on the middle survey (1997/1998) of three circumpolar Antarctic surveys conducted between 1991/1992 and 2003/2004, was less than 1% of the original pre-whaling population size. The present study used a visual line-transect survey off the Queen Maud Land coast of Antarctica, in an area between 0 degrees and 18 degrees E and south of 67 degrees S, in January 2014, to estimate the abundance of Antarctic blue whales in this area. Effort-accounted densities of sightings averaged 13.3 individuals per 1 000 nautical miles of survey effort (CV = 0.26) and reinforce recent findings that the area has significantly higher densities than averaged in circumpolar surveys (0.17-1.48 per 1 000 nautical miles). Distance sampling resulted in a population density estimate of 0.019 whales nautical-mile(-2) (CV = 0.24) and an estimated abundance of 1 026 Antarctic blue whales (CV = 0.20, 95% CI 632-1 450) in the surveyed area. Obtaining such current estimates of abundance is crucial for assessment of the conservation status of the Antarctic blue whale population and for monitoring its recovery.

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