4.3 Article

The Colombian Caribbean Sea: a tropical habitat for the Vulnerable sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus?

Journal

ORYX
Volume 56, Issue 6, Pages 814-824

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0030605321001113

Keywords

Atlantic; Colombia; depth levels; environmental variables; Maxent model; Physeter macrocephalus; species distribution; sperm whale

Funding

  1. Universidad del Valle
  2. Centro de Investigaciones Oceanograficas e Hidrograficas del Caribe
  3. Colombian Sciences Ministry [848]

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This study combines data from offshore surveys and literature to describe the potential distribution of sperm whales in the Colombian Caribbean for the first time. The study suggests that the Colombian Caribbean may be an important tropical habitat for sperm whales.
We studied the sperm whale Physeter macrocephalus in the Colombian Caribbean by combining data from our offshore surveys of behaviour, encounter rate, group structure and density with data from the literature. We describe for the first time the potential distribution of sperm whales in the Colombian Caribbean, using sighting and acoustic data obtained during our surveys, published information, and opportunistic encounters during 1988-2020. We conducted surveys on seismic vessels over 703 days during 2011-2016, covering an area of 68,904 km(2). We recorded 98 individuals in a total of 50 groups, a density of 1.42 individuals per 1,000 km(2). To determine the potential distribution of the species, we built Maxent models with uncorrelated environmental variables at five depths (from the surface to c. 2,000 m). The model for 1,000 m depth had the best performance, with areas of high probability of occurrence of sperm whales in the south and north-east Colombian Caribbean over the shelf break to waters up to c. 3,000 m deep, at a median distance of 107 km from the coast, and near the Archipelago of San Andres, Old Providence and Saint Catherine in the north-west. This area may be an important tropical habitat for sperm whales, in which they socialize, rest, breed and feed. Our study underlines the importance of monitoring marine mammals offshore and describes the potential distribution of sperm whales in the Colombian Caribbean, supporting conservation actions for this Vulnerable species, which is currently facing several threats in this region.

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