4.3 Article

Odontocete occurrence in relation to changes in oceanography at a remote equatorial Pacific seamount

Journal

MARINE MAMMAL SCIENCE
Volume 32, Issue 3, Pages 805-825

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mms.12299

Keywords

odontocetes; long-term monitoring; passive acoustics; seamount; hotspot; ecology; oceanography; beaked whale; dolphin

Funding

  1. NOAA, Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center
  2. National Geographic Society

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Seamounts are considered hot spots of biodiversity and can aggregate pelagic predators and their prey. Passive acoustic monitoring was conducted over 3 mo in 2012 to document the occurrence of odontocetes near a seamount chain in the central equatorial Pacific in relation to oceanographic changes over time. Beaked whale echolocation signals were most frequently encountered. The main beaked whale signal was an unknown type, BW38, which resembled signals produced by Blainville's beaked whales. It had high occurrence during high sea surface temperature and low sea surface salinity. Cuvier's beaked whales were the second most detected. They had an opposite pattern and were encountered more often when sea surface temperature was low and net primary productivity was high. Risso's dolphins and short-finned pilot whales had high acoustic densities, and echolocated predominantly at night. Risso's dolphins occurred more often during low sea surface height deviation. False killer whales were less frequently detected and mostly occurred during the day. Sperm whale detections were fewer than expected and associated with high chlorophyll a. Short duration Kogiidae encounters occurred on average every third day. These types of long-term site studies are an informative tool to comparatively assess species composition, relative abundance, and relationship to oceanographic changes.

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