Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-8ctnn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T08:17:24.527Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A longitudinal study of humpback whales in Irish waters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2015

Conor Ryan*
Affiliation:
Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, Merchant's Quay, Kilrush, Co. Clare, Ireland Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust, 28 Main Street, Tobermory, Isle of Mull, PA75 6NU, UK
Pádraig Whooley
Affiliation:
Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, Merchant's Quay, Kilrush, Co. Clare, Ireland
Simon D. Berrow
Affiliation:
Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, Merchant's Quay, Kilrush, Co. Clare, Ireland Marine and Freshwater Research Centre, Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology, Dublin Road, Galway, Ireland
Colin Barnes
Affiliation:
Cork Whale Watch, Reen Pier, Union Hall, Co. Cork, Ireland
Nick Massett
Affiliation:
Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, Merchant's Quay, Kilrush, Co. Clare, Ireland
Wouter J. Strietman
Affiliation:
Stichting Rugvin, Jeruzalem 31A, 6881 JL Velp, the Netherlands
Fredrik Broms
Affiliation:
Akvaplan-Niva AS, Fram Centre, 9296 Tromsø, Norway
Peter T. Stevick
Affiliation:
Allied Whale, College of the Atlantic, 105 Eden Street, Bar Harbor, Maine 04609, USA
Thomas W. Fernald JR
Affiliation:
Allied Whale, College of the Atlantic, 105 Eden Street, Bar Harbor, Maine 04609, USA
Christian Schmidt
Affiliation:
Húsavík Whale Museum, Hafnarstett, PO Box 172, 640 Húsavík, Iceland
*
Correspondence should be addressed to:C. Ryan, Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, Merchant's Quay, Kilrush, Co. Clare, Ireland email: [email protected]

Abstract

Knowledge on the ecology of humpback whales in the eastern North Atlantic is lacking by comparison with most other ocean basins. Humpback whales were historically over-exploited in the region and are still found in low relative abundances. This, coupled with their large range makes them difficult to study. With the aim of informing more effective conservation measures in Ireland, the Irish Whale and Dolphin Group began recording sightings and images suitable for photo-identification of humpback whales from Irish waters in 1999. Validated records submitted by members of the public and data from dedicated surveys were analysed to form a longitudinal study of individually recognizable humpback whales. The distribution, relative abundance and seasonality of humpback whale sighting records are presented, revealing discrete important areas for humpback whales in Irish coastal waters. An annual easterly movement of humpback whales along the southern coast of Ireland is documented, mirroring that of their preferred prey: herring and sprat. Photo-identification images were compared with others collected throughout the North Atlantic (N = 8016), resulting in matches of two individuals between Ireland and Iceland, Norway and the Netherlands but no matches to known breeding grounds (Cape Verde and West Indies). This study demonstrates that combining public records with dedicated survey data is an effective approach to studying low-density, threatened migratory species over temporal and spatial scales that are relevant to conservation and management.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Barco, S.G., McLellan, W.A., Allen, J., Asmutis-Silvia, R.A., Mallon-Day, R., Meagher, E.M., Pabst, D.A., Robbins, J., Seton, R., Swingle, M.W., Weinrich, M.T. and Clapham, P.J. (2002) Population identity of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in the waters of the US mid-Atlantic states. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 4, 135141.Google Scholar
Beck, S., Foote, A.D., Kötter, S., Harries, O., Mandleberg, L., Stevick, P.T., Whooley, P. and Durban, J.W. (2014) Using opportunistic photo-identifications to detect a population decline of killer whales (Orcinus orca) in British and Irish waters. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 94 (6), 13271333.Google Scholar
Berrow, S., Whooley, P., O'Connell, M. and Wall, D. (2010) Irish Cetacean Review (2000–2009). Kilrush, Co. Clare: Irish Whale and Dolphin Group, 60 pp. ISBN 0–9540552-4-1.Google Scholar
Berrow, S.D., Whooley, P. and Wall, D. (2006) ISCOPE – Irish Scheme for Cetacean Observation and Public Education. Kilrush, Co. Clare: Irish Whale and Dolphin Group.Google Scholar
Brown, S.G. (1976) Modern whaling in Britain and the north-east Atlantic Ocean. Mammal Review 6, 2536.Google Scholar
Charif, R.A., Clapham, P.J. and Clark, C.W. (2001) Acoustic detections of singing humpback whales in deep waters off the British Isles. Marine Mammal Science 17, 751768.Google Scholar
Cheney, B., Thompson, P.M., Ingram, S.N., Hammond, P.S., Stevick, P.T., Durban, J.W., Culloch, R.M., Elwen, S.H., Mandleberg, L. and Janik, V.M. (2013) Integrating multiple data sources to assess the distribution and abundance of bottlenose dolphins Tursiops truncatus in Scottish waters. Mammal Review 43, 7188.Google Scholar
Dalla Rosa, L., Secchi, E.R., Maia, Y.G., Zerbini, A.N. and Heide-Jørgensen, M.P. (2008) Movements of satellite-monitored humpback whales on their feeding ground along the Antarctic Peninsula. Polar Biology 31, 771781.Google Scholar
Durban, J.W., Elston, D.A., Ellifrit, D.K., Dickson, E., Hammond, P.S. and Thompson, P.M. (2005) Multisite mark-recapture for cetaceans: population estimates with Bayesian model averaging. Marine Mammal Science 21, 8092.Google Scholar
Fairley, J.S. (1981) Irish Whales and Whaling. Belfast: Blackstaff Press.Google Scholar
Harma, C., Brophy, D., Minto, C. and Clarke, M. (2012) The rise and fall of autumn-spawning herring (Clupea harengus L.) in the Celtic Sea between 1959 and 2009: temporal trends in spawning component diversity. Fisheries Research 121, 3142.Google Scholar
Jann, B., Allen, J., Carrillo, M., Hanquet, S., Katona, S.K., Martin, A.R., Reeves, R.R., Seton, R., Stevick, P.T. and Wenzel, F.W. (2003) Migration of a humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae) between the Cape Verde Islands and Iceland. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 5, 125130.Google Scholar
Link, J.S. (2002) What does ecosystem-based fisheries management mean? Fisheries 27, 1821.Google Scholar
Ó'Cadhla, O., Mackey, M., Aguilar de Soto, N., Rogan, E. and Connolly, N. (2004) Cetaceans and Seabirds of Ireland's Atlantic Margin Volume II – Cetacean Distribution and Abundance. Report on the research carried out under the Irish Infrastructure Programme (PIP), University College Cork, 82 pp.Google Scholar
O'Sullivan, D.A., O'Keefe, E.O., Berry, A., Tully, O. and Clarke, M. (2013) An inventory of Irish herring spawning grounds. Irish Fisheries Bulletin 42, 131.Google Scholar
Palsbøll, P.J., Allen, J., Berube, M., Clapham, P.J., Feddersen, T.P., Hammond, P.S., Hudson, R.R., Jørgensen, H., Katona, S. and Larsen, A.H. (1997) Genetic tagging of humpback whales. Nature 388, 767769.Google Scholar
Palsbøll, P.J., Clapham, P.K., Mattila, D.K., Larsen, F., Sears, R., Siegismund, H.R. and Arctander, P. (1995) Distribution of mtDNA haplotypes in North Atlantic humpback whales: the influence of behaviour on population structure. Marine Ecology Progress Series 116, 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paxton, C.G., Burt, M.L., Hedley, S.L., Vikingsson, G.A., Gunnlaugsson, T. and Desportes, G. (2009) Density surface fitting to estimate the abundance of humpback whales based on the NASS-95 and NASS-2001 aerial and shipboard surveys. NAMMCO Scientific Publications 7, 143160.Google Scholar
Reeves, R.R., Smith, T.D., Josephson, E.A., Clapham, P.J. and Woolmer, G. (2004) Historical observations of humpback and blue whales in the North Atlantic Ocean: clues to migratory routes and possibly additional feeding grounds. Marine Mammal Science 20, 774786.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ryan, C., Berrow, S.D., McHugh, B., O'Donnell, C., Trueman, C.N. and O'Connor, I. (2014) Prey preferences of sympatric fin (Balaenoptera physalus) and humpback (Megaptera novaeangliae) whales revealed by stable isotope mixing models. Marine Mammal Science 30, 242258.Google Scholar
Ryan, C., McHugh, B., Boyle, B., McGovern, E., Bérubé, M., Lopez-Suárez, P., Elfes, C.T., Boyd, D.T., Ylitalo, G.M. and Van Blaricom, G.R. (2013) Levels of persistent organic pollutants in eastern North Atlantic humpback whales. Endangered Species Research 22, 213223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, T.D. and Reeves, R.R. (2003) Estimating American 19th century catches of humpback whales in the West Indies and Cape Verde Islands. Caribbean Journal of Science 39, 286297.Google Scholar
Stevick, P.T., Allen, J., Bérubé, M., Clapham, P.J., Katona, S.K., Larsen, F., Lien, J., Mattila, D.K., Palsbøll, P.J. and Robbins, J. (2003a) Segregation of migration by feeding ground origin in North Atlantic humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae). Journal of Zoology 259, 231237.Google Scholar
Stevick, P.T., Allen, J., Clapham, P.J., Friday, N., Katona, S.K., Larsen, F., Lien, J., Mattila, D.K., Palsbøll, P.J. and Sigurjónsson, J. (2003b) North Atlantic humpback whale abundance and rate of increase four decades after protection from whaling. Marine Ecology Progress Series 258, 263273.Google Scholar
Stevick, P.T., Allen, J., Clapham, P.J., Katona, S.K., Larsen, F., Lien, J., Mattila, D.K., Palsbøll, P.J., Sears, R., Sigurjonsson, J., Smith, T.D., Vikingsson, G., Øien, N. and Hammond, P.S. (2006) Population spatial structuring on the feeding grounds in North Atlantic humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae). Journal of Zoology 270, 244255.Google Scholar
Stevick, P.T., Øien, N. and Mattila, D.K. (1999) Migratory destinations of humpback whales from Norwegian and adjacent waters: evidence for stock identity. Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 1, 147152.Google Scholar
Volkenandt, M., Berrow, S., O'Connor, I., Guarini, J.M. and O'Donnell, C. (2014) Prespawning herring distribution in the Irish Celtic Sea between 2005 and 2012. ICES Journal of Marine Science. doi: 10.1093/icesjms/fsu143.Google Scholar
Wall, D., Murray, C., O'Brien, J., Kavanagh, L., Wilson, C., Ryan, C., Glanville, B., Williams, D., Enlander, I., O'Connor, I., McGrath, D., Whooley, P. and Berrow, S. (2013) Atlas of the Distribution and Relative Abundance of Marine Mammals in Irish Offshore Waters: 2005–2011. Kilrush, Co. Clare: Irish Whale and Dolphin Group.Google Scholar
Wenzel, F.W., Allen, J., Berrow, S., Hazevoet, C.J., Jann, B., Seton, R.E., Steiner, L., Stevick, P., Suárez, P.L. and Whooley, P. (2009) Current knowledge on the distribution and relative abundance of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) off the Cape Verde Islands, Eastern North Atlantic. Aquatic Mammals 35, 502510.Google Scholar
Whooley, P., Berrow, S. and Barnes, C. (2011) Photo-identification of fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus L.) off the south coast of Ireland. Marine Biodiversity Records 4, e8.Google Scholar
Zerbini, A.N., Andriolo, A., Heide-Jørgensen, M.P., Pizzorno, J.L., Maia, Y.G., VanBlaricom, G.R., DeMaster, D.P., Simões-Lopes, P.C., Moreira, S. and Bethlem, C. (2006) Satellite-monitored movements of humpback whales Megaptera novaeangliae in the Southwest Atlantic Ocean. Marine Ecology Progress Series 313, 295304.Google Scholar