1. Passive acoustic monitoring of baleen whale seasonal presence across the New York Bight.
- Author
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Estabrook, Bobbi J., Bonacci-Sullivan, Lisa A., Harris, Danielle V., Hodge, Kristin B., Rahaman, Ashakur, Rickard, Meghan E., Salisbury, Daniel P., Schlesinger, Matthew D., Zeh, Julia M., Parks, Susan E., and Rice, Aaron N.
- Subjects
BALEEN whales ,BLUE whale ,HUMPBACK whale ,HARBORS ,WILDLIFE conservation - Abstract
The New York Bight is an ecologically and economically important marine region along the U.S. Atlantic Coast. Extensive assessments have characterized the habitats and biota in this ecosystem; however, most have focused on fishes, benthic habitats, and human impacts. To investigate the spatial and temporal occurrence of whales in this region, we conducted a three-year passive acoustic monitoring survey that documented the acoustic presence of five baleen whale species that occur within the New York Bight and are of conservation concern: North Atlantic right whales (Eubalaena glacialis), humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae), fin whales (Balaenoptera physalus), sei whales (Balaenoptera borealis), and blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus). Data were recorded with 14 bottom-mounted acoustic sensors across the continental shelf between 2017 and 2020. Right whales were detected across all seasons, with most detections in autumn closer to New York Harbor and spring detections at sites closer to the continental shelf edge. Humpbacks were detected during all months of the year with varying distribution of detections across the shelf. The year-round presence of right and humpback whales challenges previous hypotheses that this region is primarily a stopover location along their migration paths. Fin whales were detected at all sites on most days. Sei whales were detected primarily during the spring at offshore sites. Blue whales were detected in the winter at sites closer to the continental shelf edge, but were rare. These data improve our understanding of baleen whale seasonal occurrences in the New York Bight and can inform monitoring and mitigation efforts associated with the management and conservation of these species. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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