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Friday, 21 June 2019
Song of one of rarest whales on planet recorded for first time
There are only about 30 north Pacific right whales left after hunters nearly wiped out the slow-moving animals
Associated Press
The song of a north Pacific right whale has been recorded for the first time.
Photograph: AP
Marine biologists for the first time have recorded singing by one of
the rarest whales on the planet, the north Pacific right whale.
Researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) used moored acoustic recorders to capture repeated patterns of
calls made by male north Pacific right whales.
It is the first time right whale songs in any population have been
documented, said NOAA Fisheries marine biologist Jessica Crance on
Wednesday.
Researchers detected four distinct songs over eight years at five locations in the Bering Sea off Alaska’s south-west coast, Crance said.
First audio recording of rare north pacific right whale – video
Only about 30 of the animals remain. Whalers nearly wiped out the
slow-moving whales, which remain buoyant after they are killed.
Humpback, bowhead and other whales are known for their songs, but
during a field survey in 2010, NOAA Fisheries researchers noted weird
sound patterns they could not identify. “We thought it might be a right
whale, but we didn’t get visual confirmation,” Crance said.
The researchers reviewed long-term data from acoustic recorders and
noted repeating sound patterns. Seven years of frustration followed,
Crance said, because they could never positively confirm that the sounds
were coming from the scarce right whales.
The breakthrough came in 2017. Crance and her team heard one of the
whale songs in real time from the acoustic recorders on buoys. “It was
great to finally get the confirmation when we were out at sea that yes,
it is a right whale, and it’s a male that’s singing,” Crance said.
Right
whales make a variety of sounds. A predominant call sounds like a
gunshot. They also make upcalls, downcalls, moans, screams and warbles.
To be a song, the sounds have to contain rhythmically patterned
series of units produced in a consistent manner to form clearly
recognisable patterns, Crance wrote in a paper for the Journal of the
Acoustical Society of America. “It’s a series of sounds that are
reproduced in a stereotyped, regular manner that are repeated over and
over,” she said.
The remote Bering Sea makes studying right whales a challenge. Their
range remains unknown. Some years NOAA Fisheries researchers see no
right whales on their summer voyages. They spotted what they believe was
a juvenile in 2017 but the last Bering Sea mother-calf pairing was seen
in 2004, Crance said.
A singing male may by trying to attract a female, she said. “With
only 30 animals, finding a mate must be difficult,” Crance said.
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