Geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in Icelandic coastal waters

Investigating the movements and site fidelity of individuals enhances our understanding of population ecology and structure. Killer whales occur around the coast of Iceland; however, information on the connectivity between different regions is limited to herring grounds, where they are observed freq...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Marine Biology
Other Authors: Marchon, Tatiana M. J. (author), Rasmussen, Marianne H. (author), Basran, Charla J. (author), Whittaker, Megan (author), Bertulli, Chiara G. (author), Harlow, Cathy (author), Lott, Rob (author), Boisseau, Oliver (author), Gendron, Frédéric (author), Guo, Luisa (author), Hudson, Tess (author), Jónsson, Hörður (author), Kershaw, Alexa (author), Kinni, Joonas (author), Lionnet, Laetitia A. M. G. (author), Louis, Marie (author), Messina, Matt (author), Michel, Hanna (author), Neubarth, Barbara K. (author), Ovide, Belén G. (author), Podt, Annemieke E. (author), Rempel, Jonathan N. (author), Ryan, Conor (author), Savage, Eddy (author), Scott, Judith (author), Smit, Ronald (author), Verdaat, Hans (author), Vignisson, Solvi R. (author), Samarra, Filipa I. P. (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-023-04345-7
id ftncar:oai:drupal-site.org:articles_26852
record_format openpolar
spelling ftncar:oai:drupal-site.org:articles_26852 2024-01-28T10:06:45+01:00 Geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in Icelandic coastal waters Marchon, Tatiana M. J. (author) Rasmussen, Marianne H. (author) Basran, Charla J. (author) Whittaker, Megan (author) Bertulli, Chiara G. (author) Harlow, Cathy (author) Lott, Rob (author) Boisseau, Oliver (author) Gendron, Frédéric (author) Guo, Luisa (author) Hudson, Tess (author) Jónsson, Hörður (author) Kershaw, Alexa (author) Kinni, Joonas (author) Lionnet, Laetitia A. M. G. (author) Louis, Marie (author) Messina, Matt (author) Michel, Hanna (author) Neubarth, Barbara K. (author) Ovide, Belén G. (author) Podt, Annemieke E. (author) Rempel, Jonathan N. (author) Ryan, Conor (author) Savage, Eddy (author) Scott, Judith (author) Smit, Ronald (author) Verdaat, Hans (author) Vignisson, Solvi R. (author) Samarra, Filipa I. P. (author) 2024-01-13 https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-023-04345-7 unknown Marine Biology--Mar Biol--0025-3162--1432-1793 articles:26852 doi:10.1007/s00227-023-04345-7 ark:/85065/d7zs31mc article 2024 ftncar https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-023-04345-7 2024-01-01T19:20:18Z Investigating the movements and site fidelity of individuals enhances our understanding of population ecology and structure. Killer whales occur around the coast of Iceland; however, information on the connectivity between different regions is limited to herring grounds, where they are observed frequently. In this study, we used photo-identification data to investigate the movements and site fidelity of whales within (South and West) and outside (Southwest, Northwest, Northeast and East) Icelandic herring grounds. Additionally, we used a 10-year photo-identification dataset in the South to investigate long-term site fidelity patterns to a single location. Of the 440 individuals sighted more than once, nearly half (48%) moved between herring grounds and site fidelity was higher within, compared to outside, herring grounds. Outside herring grounds, individuals showed: more movement from Southwest to West compare to South, indicating this region is not exclusively a passage between herring grounds; low site fidelity to the Northeast with fewer photographic matches to other regions, suggesting individuals found here may be part of an offshore population that occasionally visits the area; and low proportion of matches to other regions in the Northwest and East, although small sample sizes precluded firm conclusions. Finally, long-term residency of killer whales in the South showed dynamic patterns, likely caused by prey availability and/or environmental changes. This study elucidates the complexities of killer whale occurrence and connectivity within the North Atlantic and suggests population structure that should be further investigated for appropriate regional conservation assessments. Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Killer Whale North Atlantic Killer whale OpenSky (NCAR/UCAR - National Center for Atmospheric Research/University Corporation for Atmospheric Research) Marine Biology 171 1
institution Open Polar
collection OpenSky (NCAR/UCAR - National Center for Atmospheric Research/University Corporation for Atmospheric Research)
op_collection_id ftncar
language unknown
description Investigating the movements and site fidelity of individuals enhances our understanding of population ecology and structure. Killer whales occur around the coast of Iceland; however, information on the connectivity between different regions is limited to herring grounds, where they are observed frequently. In this study, we used photo-identification data to investigate the movements and site fidelity of whales within (South and West) and outside (Southwest, Northwest, Northeast and East) Icelandic herring grounds. Additionally, we used a 10-year photo-identification dataset in the South to investigate long-term site fidelity patterns to a single location. Of the 440 individuals sighted more than once, nearly half (48%) moved between herring grounds and site fidelity was higher within, compared to outside, herring grounds. Outside herring grounds, individuals showed: more movement from Southwest to West compare to South, indicating this region is not exclusively a passage between herring grounds; low site fidelity to the Northeast with fewer photographic matches to other regions, suggesting individuals found here may be part of an offshore population that occasionally visits the area; and low proportion of matches to other regions in the Northwest and East, although small sample sizes precluded firm conclusions. Finally, long-term residency of killer whales in the South showed dynamic patterns, likely caused by prey availability and/or environmental changes. This study elucidates the complexities of killer whale occurrence and connectivity within the North Atlantic and suggests population structure that should be further investigated for appropriate regional conservation assessments.
author2 Marchon, Tatiana M. J. (author)
Rasmussen, Marianne H. (author)
Basran, Charla J. (author)
Whittaker, Megan (author)
Bertulli, Chiara G. (author)
Harlow, Cathy (author)
Lott, Rob (author)
Boisseau, Oliver (author)
Gendron, Frédéric (author)
Guo, Luisa (author)
Hudson, Tess (author)
Jónsson, Hörður (author)
Kershaw, Alexa (author)
Kinni, Joonas (author)
Lionnet, Laetitia A. M. G. (author)
Louis, Marie (author)
Messina, Matt (author)
Michel, Hanna (author)
Neubarth, Barbara K. (author)
Ovide, Belén G. (author)
Podt, Annemieke E. (author)
Rempel, Jonathan N. (author)
Ryan, Conor (author)
Savage, Eddy (author)
Scott, Judith (author)
Smit, Ronald (author)
Verdaat, Hans (author)
Vignisson, Solvi R. (author)
Samarra, Filipa I. P. (author)
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
title Geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in Icelandic coastal waters
spellingShingle Geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in Icelandic coastal waters
title_short Geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in Icelandic coastal waters
title_full Geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in Icelandic coastal waters
title_fullStr Geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in Icelandic coastal waters
title_full_unstemmed Geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in Icelandic coastal waters
title_sort geographical movements, site fidelity and connectivity of killer whales within and outside herring grounds in icelandic coastal waters
publishDate 2024
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-023-04345-7
genre Iceland
Killer Whale
North Atlantic
Killer whale
genre_facet Iceland
Killer Whale
North Atlantic
Killer whale
op_relation Marine Biology--Mar Biol--0025-3162--1432-1793
articles:26852
doi:10.1007/s00227-023-04345-7
ark:/85065/d7zs31mc
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/s00227-023-04345-7
container_title Marine Biology
container_volume 171
container_issue 1
_version_ 1789333879151132672