The distribution and local movement patterns of humpback whales in waters off the west coast of Okinawa Island, southwest Japan, were investigated using line transect and photo-identification methodologies. Line transect surveys were conducted from 2011 to 2014 and photo-identification survey from 2006 to 2012. During the surveys, humpback whales aggregated in the areas around Ie and Kerama Islands, and tended to travel along the inshore coast of Okinawa Island when they move locally between those two sites. A total of 496 humpback whales of the known sex were photo-identified (322 males, 75 females and 99 females with a calf). Of these, 24.8% were confirmed moving locally between the sites of Ie and Kerama Islands within the same season. Frequency rates of the local movement for males, females and females with a calf were 41.9, 25.0, and 15.1%, respectively; the frequency of local movement for males was significantly higher than that for females and females with a calf. These results indicate that male humpback whales tend to move more actively between the local breeding sites as compared to females and females with a calf. We speculate that the males search for more opportunities to mate, whereas females with a calf tend to remain in the same areas to nurse their calves. These findings extend our knowledge of the habitat use and reproductive ecology of humpback whales in Okinawan waters, which remain poorly understood.
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Sci Rep
March 2025
The Centre for Emerging Energy Technologies, Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering, SR University Warangal, Warangal, 506371, Telangana, India.
In response to the market's increasing need for electricity and the escalating technical and environmental challenges, the Power System (PS) sector has strongly emphasised the escalating technical and ecological challenges, and the PS sector has placed a strong emphasis on integrating distributed energy resources (DERs) into distribution systems (DS). However, if not allocated optimally, integrating DERs can provide various technical topics such as power quality, stability, reliability, and voltage management concerns. Therefore, creating effective and efficient optimisation techniques to solve issues of DER integration is crucial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
March 2025
Climate Central Inc., Princeton, NJ, USA.
Baleen whales migrate from productive high-latitude feeding grounds to usually oligotrophic tropical and subtropical reproductive winter grounds, translocating limiting nutrients across ecosystem boundaries in their bodies. Here, we estimate the latitudinal movement of nutrients through carcasses, placentas, and urea for four species of baleen whales that exhibit clear annual migration, relying on spatial data from publicly available databases, present and past populations, and measurements of protein catabolism and other sources of nitrogen from baleen whales and other marine mammals. Migrating gray, humpback, and North Atlantic and southern right whales convey an estimated 3784 tons N yr and 46,512 tons of biomass yr to winter grounds, a flux also known as the "great whale conveyor belt"; these numbers might have been three times higher before commercial whaling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
March 2025
Faculdade de Engenharia de Alimento e Zootecnia - Universidade de São Paulo, Pirassununga, São Paulo, Brazil.
Since 2010, Guiana dolphin morbillivirus (GDMV; family Paramyxoviridae, genus Morbillivirus, species Morbillivirus ceti, syn. Cetacean morbillivirus) is recognized as the cause of death of multiple cetacean species along the Brazilian coast, including an unusual mortality event in Rio de Janeiro state. Coronaviruses of the genus Gammacoronavirus (family Coronaviridae) have been previously detected in cetaceans in the northern hemisphere.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2025
Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University, Pacific Grove, California, United States of America.
Among tremendous biodiversity within the California Current Ecosystem (CCE) are gigantic mysticetes (baleen whales) that produce structured sequences of sound described as song. From six years of passive acoustic monitoring within the central CCE we measured seasonal and interannual variations in the occurrence of blue (Balaenoptera musculus), fin (Balaenoptera physalus), and humpback (Megaptera novaeangliae) whale song. Song detection during 11 months of the year defines its prevalence in this foraging habitat and its potential use in behavioral ecology research.
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February 2025
K. Lisa Yang Center for Conservation Bioacoustics, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, United States of America.
The New York Bight is an ecologically and economically important marine region along the U.S. Atlantic Coast.
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