Blue whale calling in the Rottnest trench, Western Australia, and low frequency sea noise

Through January-April 2000 research was carried out off the Rottnest trench to search for blue or pygmy blue whales. A consortium of researchers carried out aerial surveys, boat based studies and acoustical measures. Historical records led us to believe that a Western Australian population of pygm...

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Main Authors: McCauley, Robert, Jenner, Curt, Bannister, John, Cato, Doug, Duncan, Alec
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2000
Subjects:
Yes
Online Access:https://acoustics.asn.au/conference_proceedings/2000-Putting%20Science%20and%20Technology%20to%20Work.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80318
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author McCauley, Robert
Jenner, Curt
Bannister, John
Cato, Doug
Duncan, Alec
author_facet McCauley, Robert
Jenner, Curt
Bannister, John
Cato, Doug
Duncan, Alec
author_sort McCauley, Robert
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Through January-April 2000 research was carried out off the Rottnest trench to search for blue or pygmy blue whales. A consortium of researchers carried out aerial surveys, boat based studies and acoustical measures. Historical records led us to believe that a Western Australian population of pygmy blue whales (Balaenopteridae musculus brevicauda, sub species of the true blue whale, B. m. musculus) existed, while a preliminary boat survey in 1994 suggested that some of these animals aggregated in the Rottnest trench west of Perth. This was confirmed in the early 2000 observations, in 30 days boat based searching 17 pygmy blue whales were sighted. Five thousand acoustic records were made, almost all of which had blue/pygmy blue whale calling in, some having up to six animals calling at once. Although of a slightly different format, recorded call components were of a similar character to those described from other populations. Also common were impuslive 'clicking' calls which were shorter than the 12-23 s blue whale call components and of low to very low frequency (< 1 Hz to 20 Hz). The literature suggests these are produced by fin whales but none were sighted. The low frequency (< 100 Hz) sea noise spectra from a series of 90 s recordings made every 10 minutes for 33.5 days was dominated was dominated by blue whale calling.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:15:31Z
publishDate 2000
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-803182020-09-04T06:49:47Z Blue whale calling in the Rottnest trench, Western Australia, and low frequency sea noise McCauley, Robert Jenner, Curt Bannister, John Cato, Doug Duncan, Alec Yes Through January-April 2000 research was carried out off the Rottnest trench to search for blue or pygmy blue whales. A consortium of researchers carried out aerial surveys, boat based studies and acoustical measures. Historical records led us to believe that a Western Australian population of pygmy blue whales (Balaenopteridae musculus brevicauda, sub species of the true blue whale, B. m. musculus) existed, while a preliminary boat survey in 1994 suggested that some of these animals aggregated in the Rottnest trench west of Perth. This was confirmed in the early 2000 observations, in 30 days boat based searching 17 pygmy blue whales were sighted. Five thousand acoustic records were made, almost all of which had blue/pygmy blue whale calling in, some having up to six animals calling at once. Although of a slightly different format, recorded call components were of a similar character to those described from other populations. Also common were impuslive 'clicking' calls which were shorter than the 12-23 s blue whale call components and of low to very low frequency (< 1 Hz to 20 Hz). The literature suggests these are produced by fin whales but none were sighted. The low frequency (< 100 Hz) sea noise spectra from a series of 90 s recordings made every 10 minutes for 33.5 days was dominated was dominated by blue whale calling. 2000 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80318 https://acoustics.asn.au/conference_proceedings/2000-Putting%20Science%20and%20Technology%20to%20Work.pdf unknown
spellingShingle Yes
McCauley, Robert
Jenner, Curt
Bannister, John
Cato, Doug
Duncan, Alec
Blue whale calling in the Rottnest trench, Western Australia, and low frequency sea noise
title Blue whale calling in the Rottnest trench, Western Australia, and low frequency sea noise
title_full Blue whale calling in the Rottnest trench, Western Australia, and low frequency sea noise
title_fullStr Blue whale calling in the Rottnest trench, Western Australia, and low frequency sea noise
title_full_unstemmed Blue whale calling in the Rottnest trench, Western Australia, and low frequency sea noise
title_short Blue whale calling in the Rottnest trench, Western Australia, and low frequency sea noise
title_sort blue whale calling in the rottnest trench, western australia, and low frequency sea noise
topic Yes
url https://acoustics.asn.au/conference_proceedings/2000-Putting%20Science%20and%20Technology%20to%20Work.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/80318