They sing a different song in the western Indian Ocean
From The New England Aquarium
BOSTON, MASS. (December 21, 2020) – An
international team of researchers has discovered what it believes to be a new
population of blue whales in the western Indian Ocean.
*HIGH-RES
IMAGES OF BLUE WHALES AVAILABLE HERE*
Blue whales are the largest animals that
have ever lived on our planet, and they are found around the globe in all
oceans. All blue whales sing very low-pitched and recognizable songs, and
conveniently for researchers, every population has its own unique song. In a
recently published paper in the journal Endangered
Species Research, the researchers describe a new blue whale song that
is heard from the Arabian Sea coast of Oman across to the Chagos Archipelago in
the central Indian Ocean and as far south as Madagascar in the southwest Indian
Ocean.
Dr. Salvatore Cerchio, Director of the
African Aquatic Conservation Fund’s Cetacean Program and Visiting Scientist at
the New England Aquarium, led the analysis of recordings of the whale from
three locations in the western Indian Ocean. Dr. Cerchio first recorded the
novel song in 2017, during research
focused on Omura’s
whales in the Mozambique Channel off Madagascar, and he recognized it
as a blue whale song that had never been described. Cerchio was also working
with a team of scientists collecting acoustic recordings off the coast of Oman
in the Arabian Sea. This is part of a research effort focused on the highly
endangered Arabian Sea humpback whale, an ongoing collaboration between the
Environment Society of Oman, Five Oceans Environmental Services LLC, Oman’s
Environment Authority and Oman’s Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Water
Resources.
While analyzing the Oman acoustic data,
the team recognized the same unusual song. This novel blue whale song was
recorded even more prevalently off Oman than Madagascar, and it became clear to
the researchers that they had found what was likely a previously unrecognized
population of blue whales in the western Indian Ocean.
“It was quite remarkable,” said Cerchio,
“to find a whale song in your data that was completely unique, never before
reported, and recognize it as a blue whale.” Blue whale song has been
extensively studied globally, and several blue whale populations have been
identified based on their distinct songs throughout the Indian Ocean.
“With all that work on blue whale songs,
to think there was a population out there that no one knew about until 2017,
well, it kind of blows your mind,” Cerchio said.
In 2018, the team reported their
findings to the Scientific Committee of the International Whaling Commission
(IWC), which was in the process of evaluating the status of blue whale
populations in the Indian Ocean. The finding created quite a bit of excitement
at the meeting, and raised many new questions about blue whale population
movements and structure in the Indian Ocean. Emmanuelle Leroy and Tracey Rogers
of the University of New South Wales, in Sydney, Australia, were also
conducting acoustic research on blue whales in the Indian Ocean. Upon reading
the IWC report on the new song, Leroy recognized that they also had recorded
the same song off the Chagos Archipelago in the central Indian Ocean.
“Shortly after we made the first report
at IWC,” said Cerchio, “I received an email from Emmanuelle saying, ‘Hey Sal, I
think we have that Oman song off the Chagos!’”
The collaborative team grew, and
analysis of data from all three sites suggested that the population may spend
most of its time in the northwestern Indian Ocean, in the Arabian Sea and to
the west of the Chagos. It has long been recognized that a unique population of
blue whales resides in the Northern Indian Ocean, but it was assumed that
whales in the Arabian Sea belonged to the same population that has been studied
off Sri Lanka and ranges into the southcentral Indian Ocean. However, the songs
tell a different story.
“Before our recording effort off Oman,
there were no acoustic data from the Arabian Sea, and so the identity of that
population of blue whales was initially just a guess,” said Andrew Willson from
Five Oceans Environmental Services LLC, who led the deployment of the recording
units. “Our work shows that there is a lot more to learn about these animals,
and this is an urgent requirement in light of the wide range of threats to
large whales related to expanding maritime industries in the region.”
Blue whales were hunted to near
extinction around the globe during the 20th century, and
populations have only started to recover very slowly over the past several
decades following the global moratorium on commercial whaling. The Arabian Sea
was targeted by illegal Soviet whaling in the 1960’s, an activity that nearly
eradicated what were already likely to be small populations of humpback whales,
blue whales, sperm whales, and Bryde’s whales.
Some researchers consider both the
northern Indian Ocean blue whales and Arabian Sea humpback whales to comprise
unique subspecies, not simply populations, making them particularly special and
important to biodiversity.
“These populations appear to be
unique among baleen whales, in the case of the Arabian Sea humpback whales
because of their year-round residency in the region without the same long-range
migration of other populations,” Willson points out.
“For 20 years we have focused work
on the highly endangered Arabian Sea humpback whale, for which we believe only
about 100 animals remain off the coast of Oman,” says Suaad Al Harthi,
Executive Director of the Environment Society of Oman. “Now, we are just
beginning to learn more about another equally special, and likely equally
endangered, population of blue whale.”
Additional coauthors of the paper
include Robert Baldwin of Five Oceans Environmental Services LLC, Danielle
Cholewiak of NOAA Fisheries, Tim Collins of the Wildlife Conservation Society,
Gianna Minton of Megaptera Marine Conservation, Charles Muirhead of Duke
University, Tahina Rasoloarijao of the Institut Halieutique et des Sciences
Marines, Madagascar, and Maïa Sarrouf Willson of the Environment Society of
Oman.
The work was supported by the
International Whaling Commission, Renaissance Services S.A.O.G., Shell
Development Oman LLC (SDO), and NOAA Fisheries.
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