Whale-watching activities reduce resting times of southern right whale mother-calf pairs
Date
2023Abstract
Southern right whales (Eubalaena australis) are listed as Endangered under the Australian EPBC Act 1999. They
migrate to shallow, coastal waters during the winter to mate, calve and nurse their young. During this time, they
are easily accessible to the boat-based whale-watching industry. The aim of the study was to determine if whalewatching
at 300 m distance affects the behaviour of southern right whales. To achieve this, behavioural focal
follows on mother-calf pairs were conducted using unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) in the presence and absence
of a commercial whale-watching vessel. There was no significant effect of phase (control, before, during, after) on
the whales’ respiration rate, swim speed, nursing rate and duration, maternal rate of active behaviours, tactile
contact or calf pectoral fin contact. There was a significant reduction in resting between control and after phases,
for both mothers (from 62% to 30%) and calves (from 16% to 1%). At 300 m distance and slow speed, vessel
noise was measured to be slightly above ambient noise at the lower TOL0.25 kHz band, however, vessel noise was
masked by ambient noise within the higher frequency TOL2–10 kHz bands. A factor which may have contributed to
a decline in resting after whale-watch approaches, was an increase in vessel speed upon departure, which
consequently increased vessel noise. Based on this, we recommend that vessels maintain a slow speed (e.g., ≤10
knots) within 1 km distance from the whales whilst conducting whale-watch activities.