4.7 Article

The Beat Goes On: Humpback Whale Song Seasonality in Antarctic and South African Waters

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2022.827324

Keywords

seasonal occurrence; humpback whales; passive acoustics; diel-vocalizing patterns; Antarctica; South Africa; songs

Funding

  1. South African National Antarctic Programme
  2. SNA [2011112500003]

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Little is known about the movements and seasonal occurrence of humpback whales in South Africa and the Antarctic. This study investigated the seasonal occurrence and diel-vocalizing pattern of humpback whale songs in these regions using acoustic monitoring data. The study found that humpback whale songs were present in South African waters from June to December, with a peak occurrence in September/October. In Antarctic waters, songs were detected from March to May and in July, with a peak occurrence in April. Humpback whales were more active at night and the distance to sea ice extent influenced their acoustic occurrence.
Little is known of the movements and seasonal occurrence of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) of South Africa and the Antarctic, populations once brought to near extinction by historic commercial whaling. We investigated the seasonal occurrence and diel-vocalizing pattern of humpback whale songs off the west coast of South Africa (migration route and opportunistic feeding ground) and the Maud Rise, Antarctica (feeding ground), using passive acoustic monitoring data collected between early 2014 and early 2017. Data were collected using acoustic autonomous recorders deployed 200-300 m below the sea surface in waters 855, 1,118 and 4,400 m deep. Acoustic data were manually analyzed for humpback whale vocalizations. While non-song calls were never identified, humpback whale songs were detected from June through December in South African waters, with a peak in percentage of acoustic occurrence around September/October in the austral spring. In Antarctic waters, songs were detected from March through May and in July (with a peak occurrence in April) where acoustic occurrence of humpback whales was negatively correlated to distance to the sea ice extent. Humpback whales were more vocally active at night than in the day at all recording sites. Detection range modelling indicates that humpback whale vocalizations could be detected as far as 18 and 45 km from recorders in South African and Antarctic waters, respectively. This study provides a multi-year description of the offshore acoustic occurrence of humpback whales off the west coast of South Africa and Maud Rise, Antarctica, regions that should continue to be monitored to understand these recovering populations.

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