HUMPBACK WHALES, MEGAPTERA-NOVAEANGLIAE (CETACEA, BALAENOPTERIDAE), IN HERVEY BAY, QUEENSLAND

Citation
Pj. Corkeron et al., HUMPBACK WHALES, MEGAPTERA-NOVAEANGLIAE (CETACEA, BALAENOPTERIDAE), IN HERVEY BAY, QUEENSLAND, Wildlife research, 21(3), 1994, pp. 293-305
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology,Ecology
Journal title
ISSN journal
10353712
Volume
21
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
293 - 305
Database
ISI
SICI code
1035-3712(1994)21:3<293:HWM(BI>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Humpback whales, Megaptera novaeangliae, of the Antarctic Area V stock , pass through Hervey Bay, Queensland, during their southward migratio n. As part of an investigation of the impact of commercial whalewatchi ng in the bay, aerial surveys were conducted during the 1988-90 whalew atching seasons, and a photo-identification project was run over the 1 988 season. in 1988, 60 pods containing 127 whales were observed. All pods were sighted on the transects in the eastern section of Hervey Ba y, so surveys in 1989 and 1990 were confined to this area. In 1989, 22 3 whales in 121 pods were counted, and in 1990, 105 whales in 60 pods were observed. There was annual variation in the temporal pattern of t he migration through Hervey Bay. Pods tended to occur in shallow water close to the western coast of Fraser Island and, on days when several whales were observed in the bay, pods were not distributed in a regul ar fashion. Mother-calf pods were the final cohort to migrate through the Bay. The recorded sizes of whale pods varied between observation p latforms and averaged 1.75-2.81. In all, 100 whales were identified fr om photographs of natural marks. Most were photographed once only, alt hough individual whales were sighted up to seven times. Of the 34 whal es identified on more than one occasion, 24 were observed over a one- or two-day period. Pod sizes and residence times of whales in Hervey B ay resemble those of whales recorded at tropical breeding grounds. How ever, there are no data suggesting that Hervey Bay is of particular im portance to any class of the humpback whale population migrating off t he eastern coast of Australia.