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Acoustic research sheds new light on whale sounds

A pod of southern right whales. Photo: BAS
A pod of southern right whales. Photo: BAS

Scientists from SAMS, British Antarctic Survey (BAS) and international collaborators have this week published the first detailed research on the sounds made by southern right whales on their high latitude feeding grounds at South Georgia.

The  used acoustic listening devices to record and describe southern right whales鈥 call repertoire, directly linking their calls to visual sightings of the whales. In addition to describing southern right whale calls, the team compared their calls to those of the humpback whales they also recorded.

Lead author and 91精品视频Fellow Dr Susannah Calderan said: 鈥淭his is an important study. Telling the two species apart by their calls can be difficult, but is needed to enable acoustic recorders in the Southern Hemisphere to remotely monitor each species.鈥

The southern right whale vocalisations recorded by the team showed little variation in call type 鈥 they were either the characteristic 鈥渦pcall鈥, a low frequency sound believed to be used by all age and sex classes as a contact call, or the high-intensity, broadband 鈥済unshot鈥 call, thought to primarily be part of mating behaviour. Southern right whale calls could be distinguished from those of humpback whales based on their frequency characteristics and duration.

Co-author and whale ecologist, Dr Jennifer Jackson of BAS, says: 鈥淲ith South Georgia waters designated as a Marine Protected Area by the Government of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, we hope our research can continue to contribute to effective management of the area. Not only that, the results of this work will be useful for future acoustic studies on sub-Antarctic and Antarctic whale feeding grounds to improve knowledge of the distribution of southern right and humpback whales at different times of year.鈥

This research collaboration involved the following institutes: British Antarctic Survey, Scottish Association for Marine Science, University of St Andrews, Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, & Ecosystem Studies, Federal University of Juiz de Fora (Brazil), International Fund for Animal Welfare, University of Southern Denmark, Instituto Aqualie, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Australian Antarctic Division and the University of Auckland.

Led by the British Antarctic Survey, the South Georgia Wild Water Whales project has been funded by an EU BEST Medium grant, the Darwin Initiative, South Georgia Heritage Trust, Friends of South Georgia Island and the World Wildlife Fund, with support from the Government of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands.

Southern right whale vocalizations on foraging grounds in South Georgia by Calderan, S., Leaper, R., Miller, B., Andriolo, A., Buss, D., Carroll, E., Kennedy, A., Stepien, E., Jackson, J. A. (2021) is published in JASA Express Letters 1, 061202;