Behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers

Guidelines for sustainable swim-with tourism for large whales are not welldeveloped, as researchers have focused on delphinids. Nations that signed the Convention on Biological Diversity at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 are obligated to consider sustainable use principles when allowing...

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Other Authors: Wursig, Bernd, Biggs, Douglas, Davis, Randall
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Texas A&M University 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5909
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spelling fttexasamuniv:oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/5909 2023-05-15T18:26:18+02:00 Behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers Wursig, Bernd Biggs, Douglas Davis, Randall 2007-09-17T19:37:40Z http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5909 en_US eng Texas A&M University http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5909 Southern Right Whale Tourism swim-with-whale Eubalaena australis Peninsula Valdes whalewatching Book Thesis 2007 fttexasamuniv 2014-03-30T08:54:04Z Guidelines for sustainable swim-with tourism for large whales are not welldeveloped, as researchers have focused on delphinids. Nations that signed the Convention on Biological Diversity at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 are obligated to consider sustainable use principles when allowing new ecotourism activities, yet the fast-growing worldwide swim-with-whales industry is lacking the research needed to create successful management guidelines that can be implemented by local communities. From September to November of 2005 and July to October of 2006, I collected movement and behavioral state data for southern right whales in proximity of swimmers at Pen????nsula Vald????s, Argentina. Whales were observed before, during, and after a series of directed interactions with swimmers. I quantified the behavioral and movement effects relative to group composition of whales (mother/calf pairs, juveniles or adult/mixed groups) and activity level of swimmers. Group composition had a significant effect on the response of whales to swimmers. Swimmer activity level did not substantially affect the reaction of whales. Resting and socializing activities significantly decreased and traveling activities significantly increased when boats approached and when swimmers entered the water. Resting and socializing bout length in the presence of swimmers decreased to less than a third of the length of bouts when swimmers were not present. Whales swam faster, reoriented more often, and followed a less linear path during interactions. Effects were greater for mother/calf pairs than juveniles, while mixed adult/juvenile groups showed no significant changes in behavior or movement. The initial reaction of whales to the approach of the boat and the entry of swimmers into the water was a good predictor of the magnitude of effects on the behavior and movement patterns of the whale. Increased levels of activity are a concern for the whales that are resting and not feeding in this area. To provide quality resource management guidelines for this activity, additional research is needed to determine long-term effects of boat and swimmer activities on the behavior of whales. It is also important to obtain energetic data for right whales to determine the magnitude of impacts. Book Southern Right Whale Texas A&M University Digital Repository Argentina
institution Open Polar
collection Texas A&M University Digital Repository
op_collection_id fttexasamuniv
language English
topic Southern Right Whale
Tourism
swim-with-whale
Eubalaena australis
Peninsula Valdes
whalewatching
spellingShingle Southern Right Whale
Tourism
swim-with-whale
Eubalaena australis
Peninsula Valdes
whalewatching
Behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers
topic_facet Southern Right Whale
Tourism
swim-with-whale
Eubalaena australis
Peninsula Valdes
whalewatching
description Guidelines for sustainable swim-with tourism for large whales are not welldeveloped, as researchers have focused on delphinids. Nations that signed the Convention on Biological Diversity at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 are obligated to consider sustainable use principles when allowing new ecotourism activities, yet the fast-growing worldwide swim-with-whales industry is lacking the research needed to create successful management guidelines that can be implemented by local communities. From September to November of 2005 and July to October of 2006, I collected movement and behavioral state data for southern right whales in proximity of swimmers at Pen????nsula Vald????s, Argentina. Whales were observed before, during, and after a series of directed interactions with swimmers. I quantified the behavioral and movement effects relative to group composition of whales (mother/calf pairs, juveniles or adult/mixed groups) and activity level of swimmers. Group composition had a significant effect on the response of whales to swimmers. Swimmer activity level did not substantially affect the reaction of whales. Resting and socializing activities significantly decreased and traveling activities significantly increased when boats approached and when swimmers entered the water. Resting and socializing bout length in the presence of swimmers decreased to less than a third of the length of bouts when swimmers were not present. Whales swam faster, reoriented more often, and followed a less linear path during interactions. Effects were greater for mother/calf pairs than juveniles, while mixed adult/juvenile groups showed no significant changes in behavior or movement. The initial reaction of whales to the approach of the boat and the entry of swimmers into the water was a good predictor of the magnitude of effects on the behavior and movement patterns of the whale. Increased levels of activity are a concern for the whales that are resting and not feeding in this area. To provide quality resource management guidelines for this activity, additional research is needed to determine long-term effects of boat and swimmer activities on the behavior of whales. It is also important to obtain energetic data for right whales to determine the magnitude of impacts.
author2 Wursig, Bernd
Biggs, Douglas
Davis, Randall
format Book
title Behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers
title_short Behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers
title_full Behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers
title_fullStr Behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers
title_full_unstemmed Behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers
title_sort behavior and movement of southern right whales: effects of boats and swimmers
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5909
geographic Argentina
geographic_facet Argentina
genre Southern Right Whale
genre_facet Southern Right Whale
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/5909
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