TY - JOUR
T1 - There and back again
T2 - Multiple and return exchange of humpback whales between breeding habitats separated by an ocean basin
AU - Stevick, Peter T.
AU - Berrow, Simon D.
AU - Bérubé, Martine
AU - Bouveret, Laurent
AU - Broms, Fredrik
AU - Jann, Beatrice
AU - Kennedy, Amy
AU - López Suárez, Pedro
AU - Meunier, Marine
AU - Ryan, Conor
AU - Wenzel, Frederick
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2016.
PY - 2016/3/17
Y1 - 2016/3/17
N2 - In species that aggregate for reproduction, the social and fitness costs of movement between groups frequently lead to restricted exchange between breeding areas. We report on four individual humpback whales identified in both the Cape Verde Islands and Guadeloupe; locations separated by an ocean basin and >4000 km. This rate of exchange is rarely encountered between such geographically discrete breeding areas. Two individuals returned to the area where they were originally identified. In contrast, no individuals from the Cape Verde Islands were resighted to the much larger sample from the Dominican Republic, though the migratory distances from the feeding areas are comparable between these areas. The social factors driving the stark difference between groups that is observed here are not clear. Effective conservation requires an understanding of the extent and pattern of movement between population units. The findings presented here suggest that there may well be more than one behaviourally distinct group within the West Indies. More broadly, they argue that considerable caution is warranted in assumptions made regarding the number, boundaries and status of population units based solely on spatial separation or proximity.
AB - In species that aggregate for reproduction, the social and fitness costs of movement between groups frequently lead to restricted exchange between breeding areas. We report on four individual humpback whales identified in both the Cape Verde Islands and Guadeloupe; locations separated by an ocean basin and >4000 km. This rate of exchange is rarely encountered between such geographically discrete breeding areas. Two individuals returned to the area where they were originally identified. In contrast, no individuals from the Cape Verde Islands were resighted to the much larger sample from the Dominican Republic, though the migratory distances from the feeding areas are comparable between these areas. The social factors driving the stark difference between groups that is observed here are not clear. Effective conservation requires an understanding of the extent and pattern of movement between population units. The findings presented here suggest that there may well be more than one behaviourally distinct group within the West Indies. More broadly, they argue that considerable caution is warranted in assumptions made regarding the number, boundaries and status of population units based solely on spatial separation or proximity.
KW - breeding aggregation
KW - breeding habitat choice
KW - humpback whale
KW - Megaptera novaeangliae
KW - philopatry
KW - photo-identification
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U2 - 10.1017/S0025315416000321
DO - 10.1017/S0025315416000321
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84961207523
SN - 0025-3154
VL - 96
SP - 885
EP - 890
JO - Journal Of The Marine Biological Association Of The United Kingdom
JF - Journal Of The Marine Biological Association Of The United Kingdom
IS - 4
ER -