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Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser. 31:105-119
Migratory movement and population structure of humpback whales (Megaptera
novaeangliae) in the central and eastern North Pacific
- Baker, C. S., Herman, L. M., Perry, A., Lawton, W. S., Straley,
J. M., Wolman, A.A., Kaufman, G. D., Winn, H. E., Hall, J. D.,
Reinke, J. M. , & Ostman, J.
Department of Zoology and Psychology , University of Hawaii, Kewalo
Basin Marine Mammal Lboratory, 1129 Ala Moana Blvd., Honolulu,
HI, USA, 96814
(C) 1986 Marine Ecology Progress Series
Photographs of individually identified humpback
whales Megaptera novaeangliae were collected in regions throughout
the central and eastern North Pacific during the years 1977 to 1983.
A comparison of these photographs revealed extensive movement between
seasonal habitats. Whales found wintering near Hawaii traveled to
summer feeding regions throughout the coastal waters of Alaska.
Whales wintering near Mexico were found in Alaskan feeding regions
and near the Farallon Islands off central California. Little exchange
was found between the 2 wintering grounds or among the 5 summering
grounds studied. Fidelity to a given feeding region was demonstrated
by a high proportion of migratory return. Evidence of fidelity to
a given wintering ground was less conclusive. The coloration of
humpback whale flukes showed a longitudinal cline across the 5 feeding
regions. Flukes of whales from the easternmost feeding regions were,
on average, darker than those from the westernmost feeding regions.
Whales in Hawaii and Mexico were similar in fluke coloration and
the average coloration on both wintering grounds was intermediate
between the extremes of the feeding regions. We propose that humpback
whales in the eastern and central North Pacific form a single structured
stock consisting of several geographically-isolated 'feeding herds'
which intermingle on 1 or more wintering grounds. Mark-recapture
analyses of resighting data indicate that the Hawaiian wintering
congregation is 4 to 6 times larger than the southeastern Alaska
feeding herd. Within a structured stock, sets of whales interact
with different probabilities in each seasonal habitat. This, in
turn, has important implications for the social organization and
management of these whales.
Baker, C. S., Herman, L. M., Perry, A., Lawton, W. S., Straley,
J. M., Wolman, A.A., Kaufman, G. D., Winn, H. E., Hall, J. D., Reinke,
J. M. , & Ostman, J. (1986) Migratory movement and population
structure of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in the central
and eastern North Pacific. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 31, 105-119.
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