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Title
Site fidelity, population identity and demographic characteristics of humpback whales in the New York Bight apex
Author(s)
Brown, D. M.; Robbins, J.; Sieswerda, P. L.; Ackerman, C.; Aschettino, J. M.; Barco, S.; Boye, T.; DiGiovanni, R. A.; Durham, K.; Engelhaupt, A.; Hill, A.; Howes, L.; Johnson, K. F.; Jones, L.; King, C. D.; Kopelman, A. H.; Laurino, M.; Lonergan, S.; Mallette, S. D.; Pepe, M.; Ramp, C.; Rayfield, K.; Rekdahl, M.; Rosenbaum, H. C.; Schoelkopf, R.; Schulte, D.; Sears, R.; Stepanuk, J. E. F.; Tackaberry, J. E.; Weinrich, M.; Parsons, E. C. M.; Wiedenmann, J.
Published
2022
Publisher
Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025315422000388
Abstract
Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) exhibit maternally driven fidelity to feeding grounds, and yet occasionally occupy new areas. Humpback whale sightings and mortalities in the New York Bight apex (NYBA) have been increasing over the last decade, providing an opportunity to study this phenomenon in an urban habitat. Whales in this area overlap with human activities, including busy shipping traffic leading into the Port of New York and New Jersey. The site fidelity, population composition and demographics of individual whales were analysed to better inform management in this high-risk area. Whale watching and other opportunistic data collections were used to identify 101 individual humpback whales in the NYBA from spring through autumn, 2012–2018. Although mean occurrence was low (2.5 days), mean occupancy was 37.6 days, and 31.3% of whales returned from one year to the next. Individuals compared with other regional and ocean-basin-wide photo-identification catalogues (N = 52) were primarily resighted at other sites along the US East Coast, including the Gulf of Maine feeding ground. Sightings of mother-calf pairs were rare in the NYBA, suggesting that maternally directed fidelity may not be responsible for the presence of young whales in this area. Other factors including shifts in prey species distribution or changes in population structure more broadly should be investigated.
Keywords
Humpback whale; Megaptera novaeangliae; Mid-Atlantic United States; New York Bight; North Atlantic; occupancy; occurrence; photographic matching; population structure; urban ecology
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PUB35660