The westward migration of bowhead whales (Bering Sea stock) was studied during autumn 2001-04 as part of an oil industry monitoring program. An array of Directional Autonomous Seafloor Acoustic Recorders (DASARs) was deployed northeast of the Northstar oil production island near Prudhoe Bay, Alaska. Underwater sounds were recorded continuously for 24-35 days per year, mainly in September. More than 130000 bowhead calls were detected, and the directional capability of DASARs allowed triangulation of whale position for ∼93 500 calls. The migration pathway was closer to shore in 2003-04 than in 2001-02. Calls were clumped in space and time, and there was significantly more calling at night than by day. From 65% to 82% of calls were simple frequency-modulated calls, and the percentage of complex calls was positively related to the daily number of calls. No songs were detected, but in 2004 there were numerous call sequences consisting of repeated identical calls in series and generally lasting up to a few minutes. The DASAR methodology provides detailed information on the temporal and spatial distribution of calling whales and on their acoustic repertoire. © The Arctic Institute of North America.
CITATION STYLE
Blackwell, S. B., Richardson, W. J., Greene, C. R., & Streever, B. (2007). Bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus) migration and calling behaviour in the Alaskan Beaufort Sea, autumn 2001 -04: An acoustic localization study. Arctic, 60(3), 255–270. https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic218
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