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Tag retention,wound healing,and subsequent reproductive history of southern right whales following satellite‐tagging
Authors:Peter B. Best  Bruce Mate  Barbara Lagerquist
Affiliation:1. Mammal Research Institute, University of Pretoria, Cape Town 8000, South Africa;2. Marine Mammal Institute, Fisheries and Wildlife, Oregon State University, Hatfield Marine Science Center, Newport, Oregon 97365, U.S.A
Abstract:This paper presents data from 48 resightings of 16 southern right whales that were satellite‐tagged on the South African coast in September 2001, up to and including 2012. Tag performance in terms of number of days with locations received was significantly higher in males than females, and lowest in cows with calves, and attributed to behavioral differences leading to variable degrees of antenna damage. Resightings occurred from 4 to 4,054 d after tagging: tags were retained in all whales seen within 27 mo, but were apparently shed in all but one individual seen within 36 mo of tagging. The exception was a whale that still had the tag present 11 yr after tagging. Healing at the tag site occurred gradually and within 5 yr of tagging (and 2 yr after tag shedding). No significant difference in the subsequent frequency of calving was detected between 12 tagged and 382 untagged females photographed contemporaneously, and although statistical power was low, a 21% or greater reduction in calving rate in tagged females would seem incompatible with the observations. The death of one female 3 yr after tagging was more likely attributable to a ship strike on an animal debilitated by a prolapsed uterus.
Keywords:right whale     Eubalaena australis     satellite telemetry  South Africa  tag retention  wound healing  calving frequency
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