Google – AFP, Madeleine Coorey (AFP), 27 March 2013
![]() |
A blue whale is spotted off Sri Lanka on January 21, 2012
(AFP/File,
Ishara S.Kodikara)
|
SYDNEY — An
Australian-led group of scientists has for the first time tracked down and
tagged Antarctic blue whales by using acoustic technology to follow their
songs, the government said Wednesday.
The blue
whale, the largest animal on the planet, is rarely spotted in the Southern
Ocean but a group of intrepid researchers were able to locate and tag some of
the mammals after picking up on their deep and complex vocals.
Researcher
Virginia Andrews-Goff said it was the first time acoustics have been used to
lead researchers to the whales in real time, with those monitoring the whale
noises working around the clock to pinpoint them.
"The
acoustics led us to the whales," she told AFP.
"They
are quite, almost alien-like, deep resonating sounds. They are quite intense.
Very interesting to listen to."
Environment
Minister Tony Burke said the researchers, who spent seven weeks working from
small boats in freezing Antarctic conditions, were captivated by the remarkable
behaviour of the whales they saw.
"The
Antarctic blue whale can grow to over 30 metres in length and weigh up to 180
tonnes, its tongue alone is heavier than an elephant and its heart is as big as
a small car," Burke said.
![]() |
A blue whale's fluke is photographed in the
waters off the
southern Sri Lankan town
of Mirissa on January 21, 2012 (AFP/File,
Ishara
S.Kodikara)
|
"Even
the largest dinosaur was smaller than the blue whale."
Andrews-Goff
said the scientists were often out in boats only six metres in length, sitting
alongside the 30-metre giants.
"I
felt like an ant next to one of these massive whales. They are huge," she
said.
The
scientists collected 23 biopsy samples and attached satellite tags to two of
the whales, giving them never-before obtained data on the animals' movements
during their summer feeding season and their foraging behaviour.
"This
method of studying Antarctic blue whales has been so successful it will now
become the blueprint for other whale researchers across the world,"
Andrews-Goff predicted.
She said
while one tag stopped working after 17 days, the second was still working after
two weeks, although erratically.
"We
know very little about Antarctic blue whales' movement, we don't really know
migration patterns, we don't really know if some animals migrate and some
animals don't," she said.
"We
can assume that we know where the whales feed but by using these satellite tags
we can actually see where they are spending a lot of their time and if that's
associated with environmental features like the sea ice edge.
"So
the information that we can get from these tags is really useful."
The
inaugural Southern Ocean trip of the Antarctic Blue Whale Project involved
deploying acoustic buoys west of the Ross Sea to pick up blue whale songs,
which can be detected from hundreds of kilometres (miles) away.
They
recorded 626 hours of songs, with 26,545 calls from Antarctic blue whales
analysed in real time, said lead acoustician Brian Miller.
"The
researchers were then able to triangulate the position of the whales from their
vocalisations and direct the ship to the target area," he added.
![]() |
A blue whale is spotted in the waters off
the southern Sri
Lankan town of Mirissa
on January 21, 2012 (AFP/File, Ishara
S.Kodikara)
|
Burke said
the study proved it was not necessary to kill whales to conduct scientific
research, a reference to Japan's annual whale hunt in the Antarctic, which is
conducted in the name of scientific research.
"The
Antarctic blue whale barely escaped extinction during the industrial whaling
era in the 1900s when around 340,000 whales were slaughtered," Burke said
in a statement.
"This
research reinforces Australia's commitment to non-lethal research of
whales."
Scientists
on the voyage made 720 whale sightings, including of humpback, minke, fin and
bottle-nosed species.
The whale
project aims to estimate the abundance, distribution and behaviour of the
species. Andrews-Goff said estimates suggested there were only a "couple
of thousands" left.



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