Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States of America.
Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Fairbanks, Alaska, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Jun 28;16(6):e0253929. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253929. eCollection 2021.
The Distributed Biological Observatory (DBO) was established to detect environmental changes in the Pacific Arctic by regular monitoring of biophysical responses in each of 8 DBO regions. Here we examine the occurrence of bowhead and beluga whale vocalizations in the western Beaufort Sea acquired by acoustic instruments deployed from September 2008-July 2014 and September 2016-October 2018 to examine inter-annual variability of these Arctic endemic species in DBO Region 6. Acoustic data were collected on an oceanographic mooring deployed in the Beaufort shelfbreak jet at ~71.4°N, 152.0°W. Spectrograms of acoustic data files were visually examined for the presence or absence of known signals of bowhead and beluga whales. Weekly averages of whale occurrence were compared with outputs of zooplankton, temperature and sea ice from the BIOMAS model to determine if any of these variables influenced whale occurrence. In addition, the dates of acoustic whale passage in the spring and fall were compared to annual sea ice melt-out and freeze-up dates to examine changes in phenology. Neither bowhead nor beluga whale migration times changed significantly in spring, but bowhead whales migrated significantly later in fall from 2008-2018. There were no clear relationships between bowhead whales and the environmental variables, suggesting that the DBO 6 region is a migratory corridor, but not a feeding hotspot, for this species. Surprisingly, beluga whale acoustic presence was related to zooplankton biomass near the mooring, but this is unlikely to be a direct relationship: there are likely interactions of environmental drivers that result in higher occurrence of both modeled zooplankton and belugas in the DBO 6 region. The environmental triggers that drive the migratory phenology of the two Arctic endemic cetacean species likely extend from Bering Sea transport of heat, nutrients and plankton through the Chukchi and into the Beaufort Sea.
分布式生物观测站(DBO)的建立旨在通过定期监测 8 个 DBO 区域中的生物物理响应来检测太平洋北极的环境变化。在这里,我们检查了 2008 年 9 月至 2014 年 7 月和 2016 年 9 月至 2018 年 10 月期间在西波弗特海使用声学仪器获取的弓头鲸和白鲸发声的发生情况,以检查 DBO 区域 6 中这些北极特有物种的年际变化。声学数据是在位于~71.4°N、152.0°W 的波弗特陆架断裂喷流中的海洋学系泊上收集的。对声学数据文件的声谱图进行了目视检查,以确定是否存在弓头鲸和白鲸的已知信号。将每周鲸鱼出现的平均值与 BIOMAS 模型输出的浮游动物、温度和海冰进行了比较,以确定这些变量中是否有任何一个影响了鲸鱼的出现。此外,还比较了春季和秋季声学鲸鱼通过的日期与年度海冰融化和冻结日期,以检查物候学的变化。在春季,弓头鲸和白鲸的迁徙时间都没有明显变化,但在 2008 年至 2018 年期间,弓头鲸在秋季的迁徙时间明显推迟。弓头鲸与环境变量之间没有明显的关系,这表明 DBO 6 区域是该物种的迁徙走廊,但不是觅食热点。令人惊讶的是,白鲸的声学存在与系泊附近的浮游动物生物量有关,但这不太可能是直接关系:可能存在环境驱动因素的相互作用,导致模型化的浮游动物和白鲸在 DBO 6 区域的出现率更高。推动这两种北极特有鲸类迁徙物候的环境触发因素可能从白令海的热量、营养物质和浮游生物输送,通过楚科奇海延伸到波弗特海。