Geographic distribution of the Cross Seamount beaked whale based on acoustic detections

Beaked whales produce frequency‐modulated echolocation pulses that appear to be species‐specific, allowing passive acoustic monitoring to play a role in understanding spatio‐temporal patterns. The Cross Seamount beaked whale is known only from its unique echolocation signal (BWC) with no confirmed s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marine mammal science 2024-01, Vol.40 (1), p.164-183
Hauptverfasser: McCullough, Jennifer L. K., Henderson, E. Elizabeth, Trickey, Jennifer S., Barlow, Jay, Baumann‐Pickering, Simone, Manzano‐Roth, Roanne, Alongi, Gabriela, Martin, Stephen, Fregosi, Selene, Mellinger, David K., Klinck, Holger, Szesciorka, Angela R., Oleson, Erin M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Beaked whales produce frequency‐modulated echolocation pulses that appear to be species‐specific, allowing passive acoustic monitoring to play a role in understanding spatio‐temporal patterns. The Cross Seamount beaked whale is known only from its unique echolocation signal (BWC) with no confirmed species identification. This beaked whale spans the Pacific Ocean from the Mariana Archipelago to Baja California, Mexico, south to the equator, but only as far north as latitude 29°N. Within these warm waters, 92% of BWC detections occurred at night, 6% during crepuscular periods, and only 2% during daylight hours. Detections of BWC signals on drifting recorders with a vertical hydrophone array at 150 m depth demonstrated that foraging often occurred shallow in the water column (
ISSN:0824-0469
1748-7692
DOI:10.1111/mms.13061