The study will involve multiple
cruises to the whales' feeding grounds in the Southern Ocean off Antarctica and
the coastlines of the three continents where they breed.
Humpback
whales are steadily moving north, and warmer seas and melting ice may be
the reason.
The whales, which move between the Antarctic and the southern tips of three
continents, will be the focus of a six-year, $5 million study into their
migration routes by eight research institutions across South America, South
Africa and Australia.
“Their migratory
behavior is changing, they are going further and further north,” said Alakendra
Roychoudhury, an environmental geochemist at Stellenbosch University in South
Africa. “If the physical and chemical conditions of the oceans change, what
will happen to the whales?”
The study will
involve multiple cruises to the whales’ feeding grounds in the Southern Ocean
off Antarctica and the coastlines of the three continents where they breed. It
will combine historical migration and whale-sighting data with the new research
to determine the impact of both warmer oceans and melting ice, which may change
the chemical nature of the ocean, Roychoudhury said by phone Tuesday.
In South Africa,
the humpbacks, which eat phytoplankton and krill, have been seen in large
numbers, known as super groups, further and further up the west coast toward
Namibia.
“This has never
happened before,” Roychoudhury said. “Off the Australian coast they are seeing
similar kinds of things.”
Roychoudhury
conceptualized the study together with Brendan Mackey, director of the Griffith
Climate
Change Response Program at Griffith University in Australia. Researchers
from Chile, Brazil, Ecuador and Panama will also participate.
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