Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on 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 on individual's vital rates. To manage these sub-lethal impacts, we need to understand how activity disruptions can influence varia...

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Main Authors: Christiansen, F., Rasmussen, M., Lusseau, D.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28964/
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spelling ftmurdochuniv:oai:researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au:28964 2023-05-15T15:36:08+02:00 Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground Christiansen, F. Rasmussen, M. Lusseau, D. 2012 https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28964/ eng eng https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28964/ full_text_status:none Christiansen, F. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Christiansen, Fredrik.html>, Rasmussen, M. and Lusseau, D. (2012) Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground. In: ISEC 2012: Proceedings of the International Statistical Ecology 2012 Conference, 3 - 6 July, Krokkleiva, Norway. Conference Item 2012 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 on individual's vital rates. To manage these sub-lethal impacts, we need to understand how activity disruptions can influence variation in individual's vital rates. This study informs the mechanistic links between whalewatching boat exposure and behavioural variation and vital rates for Mysticetes. We compared Minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata behaviour on a feeding ground in the presence and absence of whalewatching boats in Iceland, using individual focal follows. Activity states were inferred from movement metric data and multi-state models were used to estimate the relative proportion of different activity states. Spatially explicit mark-recapture models were used to estimate the seasonal exposure rate of individual whales to whalewatching activities. Whalewatching interactions disrupted the foraging behaviour of Minke whales, causing a decrease in proportion of time whales spent foraging. The cumulative exposure was sufficiently large to cause changes in the animal's seasonal behavioural budget. Minke whales are capital breeders, so a decrease in foraging success on feeding grounds due to whalewatching could lead to a decrease in energy available for lactation on breeding grounds, which could have negative effects on calf survival. Conference Object Balaenoptera acutorostrata Iceland 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 on individual's vital rates. To manage these sub-lethal impacts, we need to understand how activity disruptions can influence variation in individual's vital rates. This study informs the mechanistic links between whalewatching boat exposure and behavioural variation and vital rates for Mysticetes. We compared Minke whale Balaenoptera acutorostrata behaviour on a feeding ground in the presence and absence of whalewatching boats in Iceland, using individual focal follows. Activity states were inferred from movement metric data and multi-state models were used to estimate the relative proportion of different activity states. Spatially explicit mark-recapture models were used to estimate the seasonal exposure rate of individual whales to whalewatching activities. Whalewatching interactions disrupted the foraging behaviour of Minke whales, causing a decrease in proportion of time whales spent foraging. The cumulative exposure was sufficiently large to cause changes in the animal's seasonal behavioural budget. Minke whales are capital breeders, so a decrease in foraging success on feeding grounds due to whalewatching could lead to a decrease in energy available for lactation on breeding grounds, which could have negative effects on calf survival.
format Conference Object
author Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.
Lusseau, D.
spellingShingle Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.
Lusseau, D.
Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground
author_facet Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.
Lusseau, D.
author_sort Christiansen, F.
title Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground
title_short Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground
title_full Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground
title_fullStr Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground
title_full_unstemmed Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground
title_sort cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on minke whales on a feeding ground
publishDate 2012
url https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28964/
genre Balaenoptera acutorostrata
Iceland
minke whale
genre_facet Balaenoptera acutorostrata
Iceland
minke whale
op_source Christiansen, F. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Christiansen, Fredrik.html>, Rasmussen, M. and Lusseau, D. (2012) Cumulative seasonal effects of whalewatching on Minke whales on a feeding ground. In: ISEC 2012: Proceedings of the International Statistical Ecology 2012 Conference, 3 - 6 July, Krokkleiva, Norway.
op_relation https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28964/
full_text_status:none
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