Minton,G.,Collins,T.J.Q.,Findlay,K.P.,Baldwin,R.,Rosenbaum,H.C.,Kennedy,F.D.,Cockcroft,V.
Preliminary investigations of humpback whale Technical Report
no. 414, 2002, ISBN: SC/54/H3.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: abundance, Arabian Sea, Distribution, habitat use, Humpback Whale, humpback whales, megaptera novaeangliae, Northern Hemisphere, occurrence, Oman, population, relative abundance, sex-ratio, song, survey, whale, whales, whaling
@techreport{,
title = {Preliminary investigations of humpback whale },
author = {Minton,G.,Collins,T.J.Q.,Findlay,K.P.,Baldwin,R.,Rosenbaum,H.C.,Kennedy,F.D.,Cockcroft,V.},
issn = {SC/54/H3},
year = {2002},
date = {2002-01-01},
journal = {Document presented to the 54th meeting of the International Whaling Commission},
volume = {SC/54/H3},
number = {414},
pages = {1-19},
abstract = {Previously published data on the occurrence of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in the Arabian Sea suggest that the region hosts a non-migratory population that adheres to a Northern Hemisphere breeding cycle. Six small boat surveys and one shore-based survey were conducted at three locations off the coast of Oman between February 2000 and February 2002. Encounter rates varied between surveys from 0.0 whales/hour to 0.545 whales per hour. Two of 36 photo-identified whales were re-sighted between surveys. Sex ratios in October were near parity while all whales sampled in February were male. Song was detected frequently in the Kuria Muria Bay in February, but records of mother-calf pairs are sparse and competitive groups were absent. Feeding was infrequently observed in both October and February. Implications for relative abundance and habitat use are discussed. Additional questions are raised and recommendations for further research are made.},
keywords = {abundance, Arabian Sea, Distribution, habitat use, Humpback Whale, humpback whales, megaptera novaeangliae, Northern Hemisphere, occurrence, Oman, population, relative abundance, sex-ratio, song, survey, whale, whales, whaling},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {techreport}
}
Previously published data on the occurrence of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in the Arabian Sea suggest that the region hosts a non-migratory population that adheres to a Northern Hemisphere breeding cycle. Six small boat surveys and one shore-based survey were conducted at three locations off the coast of Oman between February 2000 and February 2002. Encounter rates varied between surveys from 0.0 whales/hour to 0.545 whales per hour. Two of 36 photo-identified whales were re-sighted between surveys. Sex ratios in October were near parity while all whales sampled in February were male. Song was detected frequently in the Kuria Muria Bay in February, but records of mother-calf pairs are sparse and competitive groups were absent. Feeding was infrequently observed in both October and February. Implications for relative abundance and habitat use are discussed. Additional questions are raised and recommendations for further research are made.
Fatima,M.
Euphausiids from central part of north Arabian Sea collected in S.W. monsoon season Journal Article
In: Marine Research, Karachi, vol. 1, no. 92, pp. 79-85, 1992.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: Arabian Sea, Euphausiid, sex-ratio
@article{,
title = {Euphausiids from central part of north Arabian Sea collected in S.W. monsoon season},
author = {Fatima,M.},
year = {1992},
date = {1992-01-01},
journal = {Marine Research, Karachi},
volume = {1},
number = {92},
pages = {79-85},
abstract = {Four species of Euphausiacea (E. sibogae, E. dimedeae, P. latifrons, and S. carinatum) collected during the sw monsoon season from an open sea station (63 degree E, 20 degree N) in the central part of the north Arabian Sea are reported. Size structure, sex ratios and key to the identification of these species with figures is provided.},
keywords = {Arabian Sea, Euphausiid, sex-ratio},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Four species of Euphausiacea (E. sibogae, E. dimedeae, P. latifrons, and S. carinatum) collected during the sw monsoon season from an open sea station (63 degree E, 20 degree N) in the central part of the north Arabian Sea are reported. Size structure, sex ratios and key to the identification of these species with figures is provided.