4.3 Article

Migratory preferences of humpback whales between feeding and breeding grounds in the eastern South Pacific

Journal

MARINE MAMMAL SCIENCE
Volume 33, Issue 4, Pages 1035-1052

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mms.12423

Keywords

Megaptera novaeangliae; migratory destinations; Breeding Stock G; photo-identification; feeding ground; Antarctic Peninsula; Fueguian Archipelago

Funding

  1. Ecologia e Conservacao da Megafauna Marinha - EcoMega/CNPq
  2. Antarctic Research Project Baleias/Proantar (CNPq) [408096/2013-6]
  3. National Institute of Science and Technology Antarctic Environmental Research (INCT-APA) (CNPq) [574018/2008-5]
  4. Pacific Whale Foundation
  5. USFQ GAIAS grant
  6. INACH Projects [163, G-16-10]
  7. Rufford Small Grants for Nature Conservancy
  8. Colciencias
  9. Ecofondo
  10. WWF-Colombia
  11. Fundacion Sentir
  12. Fondo para la Accion Ambiental
  13. Cetacean Society International
  14. Idea Wild
  15. Moore Charitable Foundation
  16. National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
  17. Homeland Foundation
  18. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (Panama)
  19. Darwin Initiative (UK)
  20. Conicyt Regional grant [R13A1002]
  21. Conicyt Regional/GORE Magallanes [R07K1002]

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Latitudinal preferences within the breeding range have been suggested for Breeding Stock G humpback whales that summer in different feeding areas of the eastern South Pacific. To address this hypothesis, humpback whales photo-identified from the Antarctic Peninsula and the Fueguian Archipelago (southern Chile) were compared with whales photo-identified from lower latitudes extending from northern Peru to Costa Rica. This comparison was performed over a time span that includes 18 austral seasons. A total of 238 whales identified from the Antarctic Peninsula and 25 whales from the Fueguian Archipelago were among those photo-identified at the breeding grounds. Our findings showed that humpback whales from each feeding area were resighted unevenly across the breeding grounds, which suggests a degree of spatial structuring in the migratory pathway. Humpback whales that feed at the Antarctic Peninsula were more likely to migrate to the southern breeding range between northern Peru and Colombia, whereas whales that feed at the Fueguian Archipelago were more likely to be found in the northern range of the breeding ground off Panama. Further photo-identification efforts and genetic sampling from poorly sampled or unsampled areas are recommended to confirm these reported connectivity patterns.

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