Graduate students lead research effort aboard the R/V Falkor

University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
Contact:
Talia S Ogliore, (808) 956-4531
Public Information Officer, Vice Chancellor for Research
Posted: Feb 14, 2014

Short-finned pilot whale (Credit: Jessica Chen)
Short-finned pilot whale (Credit: Jessica Chen)
 R/V Falkor, Schmidt Ocean Institute (Credit: Mark Schrope)
R/V Falkor, Schmidt Ocean Institute (Credit: Mark Schrope)

Scientists from the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa (UHM) School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology (SOEST) have been allocated over 100 days at sea, spread out over the next 6 months, aboard the R/V Falkor, the oceanographic research ship belonging to the Schmidt Ocean Institute (SOI; http://www.schmidtocean.org/). 

Numerous questions remain about what determines the feeding behaviors of whales in the deep sea.  During the first cruise, the first ever student-led cruise on the R/V Falkor, the team will be answering some of those questions while gaining invaluable at-sea experience.

UHM PhD candidate Adrienne Copeland is the chief scientist for this expedition, which will focus on deep-diving toothed species found in Hawaiian waters—beaked, short-finned pilot, and endangered sperm whales. While extensive work has been done throughout most parts of the world to study whale migrations and concentrations, much less work has been done to understand the factors that control these migrations. This cruise will include two projects focused on that topic with team members from UHM, including the Hawai‘i Institute of Marine Biology, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Copeland will be building on past work using acoustics to learn more about where whales feed. Toothed whales, known formally as odontocetes, sometimes dive down 1,000 meters or more, complicating the job of studying what attracts them and what holds their foraging attention.

Copeland will use sound to locate diving whales and quantify how much food is available in the areas where they spend their time during dives. Her hypothesis is that whales may be targeting places where prey is particularly abundant within or below what’s known as the deep scattering layer.

The deep scattering layer (DSL) is a layer at which smaller fish, crustaceans, jellies, and other organisms tend to concentrate. During the day, this happens in deep waters below the reach of sunlight, where these smaller animals retreat to the relative safety of darkness to avoid predators. But many feed on algae in shallower waters, so each night about half of the organisms collectively move to shallower depths under the cover of darkness. This daily movement up and down constitutes the planet’s largest migration.

Complementary research during the cruise by Giacomo Giorli, an oceanography PhD student at UHM, will elucidate more of the story that Copeland is working to tell. Giorli’s work focuses on figuring out more specifically what aspects of the deep scattering layer might be most attractive to foraging whales.

The idea is that diving several hundred or even a thousand meters down uses up a huge amount of energy, so the payoff must be comparably huge. To make the effort worthwhile, whales must either get lots of small fish and other animals on a single dive, or an equivalent volume of food from larger animals. Giorli’s hypothesis is that the whales are going after larger squid that aren’t necessarily a component of the DSL but might be attracted to it for their own feeding.

SOI is a private non-profit operating foundation established to advance the understanding of the world's oceans through innovative technologies, intelligent observation, and open sharing of information.  In the spirit of sharing information and passion for ocean exploration, the researchers on the upcoming cruises will be blogging daily activities and new findings.  Additionally, upon their return, the researchers will visit local classrooms to share the excitement of discovery.    

On the future R/V Falkor cruises, SOEST researchers and partners will be creating detailed maps of the seafloor of the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands (http://www.schmidtocean.org/story/show/2216), investigating microbes around Loihi (the emerging seamount south of the Big Island (http://www.schmidtocean.org/story/show/2225), and more.

# # #

Read more about the cruise and follow along as the scientists share blog posts, including video and photos, on life at sea, what it takes to research whale behavior, and what they learn along the way here: http://www.schmidtocean.org/story/show/2245.

For more information, visit: www.soest.hawaii.edu