Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground

Human disturbances of wildlife, such as tourism, can alter the activities of targeted individuals. Repeated behavioural disruptions can have long-term consequences for individual vital rates (survival and reproduction). To manage these sub-lethal impacts, we need to understand how activity disruptio...

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Main Authors: Christiansen, F., Rasmussen, M., Lusseau, D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Inter-Research 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28959/
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spelling ftmurdochuniv:oai:researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au:28959 2023-05-15T15:36:09+02:00 Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground Christiansen, F. Rasmussen, M. Lusseau, D. 2013 https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28959/ eng eng Inter-Research https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28959/ full_text_status:public © Inter-Research 2013. Christiansen, F. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Christiansen, Fredrik.html>, Rasmussen, M. and Lusseau, D. (2013) Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 478 . pp. 239-251. Journal Article 2013 ftmurdochuniv 2020-01-05T18:55:22Z Human disturbances of wildlife, such as tourism, can alter the activities of targeted individuals. Repeated behavioural disruptions can have long-term consequences for individual vital rates (survival and reproduction). To manage these sub-lethal impacts, we need to understand how activity disruptions can influence bioenergetics and ultimately individual vital rates. Empirical studies of the mechanistic links between whale-watching boat exposure and behavioural variation and vital rates are currently lacking for baleen whales (mysticetes). We compared minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata behaviour on a feeding ground in the presence and absence of whale-watching boats. Effects on activity states were inferred from changes in movement metric data as well as the occurrence of surface feeding events. Linear mixed effects models and generalised estimation equations were used to investigate the effect of whale-watching boat interactions. Measurement errors were quantified, and their effects on model parameter estimates were investigated using resampling methods. Minke whales responded to whale-watching boats by performing shorter dives and increased sinuous movement. A reduction in the probability of observing longer inter-breath intervals during sinuous movement showed that whale-watching boat interactions reduced foraging activity. Further, the probability of observing surface feeding events also decreased during interactions with whale-watching boats. This indicates that whalewatching boats disrupted the feeding activities of minke whales. Since minke whales are capital breeders, a decrease in feeding success on the feeding grounds due to whale-watching boats could lead to a decrease in energy available for foetus development and nursing on the breeding grounds. Such impact could therefore alter the calving success of this species. Article in Journal/Newspaper Balaenoptera acutorostrata baleen whales minke whale Murdoch University: Murdoch Research Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Murdoch University: Murdoch Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmurdochuniv
language English
description Human disturbances of wildlife, such as tourism, can alter the activities of targeted individuals. Repeated behavioural disruptions can have long-term consequences for individual vital rates (survival and reproduction). To manage these sub-lethal impacts, we need to understand how activity disruptions can influence bioenergetics and ultimately individual vital rates. Empirical studies of the mechanistic links between whale-watching boat exposure and behavioural variation and vital rates are currently lacking for baleen whales (mysticetes). We compared minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata behaviour on a feeding ground in the presence and absence of whale-watching boats. Effects on activity states were inferred from changes in movement metric data as well as the occurrence of surface feeding events. Linear mixed effects models and generalised estimation equations were used to investigate the effect of whale-watching boat interactions. Measurement errors were quantified, and their effects on model parameter estimates were investigated using resampling methods. Minke whales responded to whale-watching boats by performing shorter dives and increased sinuous movement. A reduction in the probability of observing longer inter-breath intervals during sinuous movement showed that whale-watching boat interactions reduced foraging activity. Further, the probability of observing surface feeding events also decreased during interactions with whale-watching boats. This indicates that whalewatching boats disrupted the feeding activities of minke whales. Since minke whales are capital breeders, a decrease in feeding success on the feeding grounds due to whale-watching boats could lead to a decrease in energy available for foetus development and nursing on the breeding grounds. Such impact could therefore alter the calving success of this species.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.
Lusseau, D.
spellingShingle Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.
Lusseau, D.
Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground
author_facet Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.
Lusseau, D.
author_sort Christiansen, F.
title Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground
title_short Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground
title_full Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground
title_fullStr Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground
title_full_unstemmed Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground
title_sort whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground
publisher Inter-Research
publishDate 2013
url https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28959/
genre Balaenoptera acutorostrata
baleen whales
minke whale
genre_facet Balaenoptera acutorostrata
baleen whales
minke whale
op_source Christiansen, F. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Christiansen, Fredrik.html>, Rasmussen, M. and Lusseau, D. (2013) Whale watching disrupts feeding activities of minke whales on a feeding ground. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 478 . pp. 239-251.
op_relation https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28959/
full_text_status:public
op_rights © Inter-Research 2013.
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