How To Find a Cryptic Animal: Recording the Elusive Beaked Whale in the Foz do Amazonas Basin

While finding the creatures takes a lot of work, the results are worth it.

A beaked whale sighting from the researchers’ field study in the Foz do Amazonas Basin. Credit: Machado et al.

A beaked whale sighting from the researchers’ field study in the Foz do Amazonas Basin. Credit: Machado et al.

WASHINGTON, Sept. 9, 2025 – Whale watching is a popular pastime on coastlines around the world. Cetaceans like blue whales, humpbacks, and orcas can be seen in the wild, and their characteristics are well categorized in science and popular culture. Other cetaceans, however, are less outgoing, preferring to stay out of the limelight.

Beaked whales are considered one of the least understood mammals in the world, which is due to their cryptic…click to read more

From: The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Article: Finding beaked whales in the Foz do Amazonas Basin: Visual and acoustic records of a deep diving cetacean
DOI: 10.1121/10.0038973

Sound Highways of the Sea: Mapping Acoustic Corridors for Whales and Fish in Colombia’s Pacific

Maria Paula Rey Baquero – rey_m@javeriana.edu.co
Instagram: @mariapaulareyb
Pontificia Universidad Javeriana
Fundación Macuáticos Colombia
Bogotá
Colombia

Additional Authors:
Kerri D. Seger
Camilo Andrés Correa Ayram
Natalia Botero Acosta
Maria Angela Echeverry-Galvis

Project Ports, Humpbacks y Sound In Colombia – @physicolombia
Fundación Macuaticos Colombia – @macuaticos
Semillero Aquasistemas – @aquasistemaspuj

Popular version of 4aAB5 – Modeling for acoustical corridors in patchy reef habitats of the Gulf of Tribugá, Colombia
Presented at the 188th ASA Meeting
Read the abstract at https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0037990

–The research described in this Acoustics Lay Language Paper may not have yet been peer reviewed–

Sound plays a fundamental role in marine ecosystems, functioning as an invisible network of “pathways” or corridors that connect habitat patches and enable critical behaviors like migration, communication, and reproduction. In Colombia’s northern Pacific, one of the most biodiverse regions, the Gulf of Tribugá stands out for its pristine soundscape, dominated by the sounds of marine life. Designated a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and a “Hope Spot” for conservation, this area serves as a vital nursery for humpback whales and supports local livelihoods through ecotourism and artisanal fishing. However, increasing human activities, including boat traffic and climate change, threaten these acoustic habitats, prompting researcher on how sound influences ecological connectivity—the lifeline for marine species’ movement and survival.

This study in Colombia’s Gulf of Tribugá mapped how ocean sounds connect marine life by integrating acoustic data with ecological modeling. Researchers analyzed how sound travels through the marine environment, finding that humpback whale songs (300 Hz) create natural acoustical corridors along coastal areas and rocky islands (‘riscales’). These pathways, though occasionally interrupted by depth variations, appear crucial for whale communication, navigation, and maintaining social connections during migration. In contrast, fish calls (100 Hz) showed no detectable sound corridors, suggesting fish may depend less on acoustic signals or use alternative navigation cues like wave noise when moving between habitats.

Photographs of some of the recorded fish species. Source: Author

The research underscores that acoustical connectivity is species-specific. While humpback whales may depend on sound corridors and prioritize long-distance communication, fish may prioritize short-range communication or other environmental signals. At any distance, noise pollution disrupts these systems universally: The bubbling/popping sounds created by spinning boat propellers, for instance, generate frequencies that can covers up the whale songs and fish calls and degrade habitat quality, even if fish are less affected over the same distances that whales are. Background noise shrinks and breaks up the underwater corridors that marine animals use to communicate and navigate, harming their underwater sound habitat.

Figure 1. Received sound levels when emitted by singers (a) without noise and (b) with background noise, at a grain size of 2 Φ. The left column shows conditions without background noise, and the right column shows conditions with noise. Sound intensities most likely to be heard by a humpback whale at 200 Hz are shown in green, less likely sounds in orange, and inaudible sounds in black. Source: Author

Noise pollution alters behaviors and acoustic corridors humpback whales rely on for communication and navigation in Colombia’s Pacific waters. Notably, the fish species studied showed no sound-dependent movement, suggesting their reliance on other cues. The study advocates for sound-inclusive conservation, proposing that acoustic data (more easily gathered today via satellites, field recordings, and public databases) should join traditional metrics like currents or temperature in marine management. Protecting acoustic corridors could become as vital as safeguarding breeding grounds, especially in biodiverse hubs like Tribugá.

This work marks a first step towards integrated acoustical-ecological models, offering tools to quantify noise impacts and design smarter protections. Future research could refine species-specific sound thresholds or expand to deeper oceanic areas. For now, the message is preserving marine ecosystems requires listening, not just looking. Combining efforts to lessen human noise by using mapped soundscapes to target critical corridors could help in the conservation of marine species.

Locating the lives of blue whales with sound informs conservation

John Ryan – ryjo@mbari.org

Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, Moss Landing, CA, 95039, United States

Popular version of 4aUW7 – Wind-driven movement ecology of blue whales detected by acoustic vector sensing
Presented at the 188th ASA Meeting
Read the abstract at https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0038108

–The research described in this Acoustics Lay Language Paper may not have yet been peer reviewed–

A technology that captures multiple dimensions of underwater sound is revealing how blue whales live, thereby informing whale conservation.

The most massive animal ever to evolve on Earth, the blue whale, needs a lot of food. Finding that food in a vast foraging habitat is challenging, and these giants must travel far and wide in search of it. The searching that leads them to life-sustaining nutrition can also lead them to a life-ending collision with a massive fast-moving ship. To support the recovery of this endangered species, we must understand where and how the whales live, and how human activities intersect with whale lives.

Toward better understanding and protecting blue whales in the California Current ecosystem, an interdisciplinary team of scientists is applying a technology called an acoustic vector sensor. Sitting just above the seafloor, this technology receives the powerful sounds produced by blue whales and quantifies changes in both pressure and particle motion that are caused by the sound waves. The pressure signal reveals the type of sound produced. The particle motion signal points to where the sound originated, thereby providing spatial information on the whales.

A blue whale in the California Current ecosystem. Image Credit: Goldbogen Lab of Stanford University / Duke Marine Robotics and Remote Sensing Lab; NMFS Permit 16111.

For blue whales, it is all about the thrill of the krill. Krill are small-bodied crustaceans that can form massive swarms. Blue whales only eat krill, and they locate swarms to consume krill by the millions (would that be krillions?). Krill form dense swarms in association with cold plumes of water that result from a wind-driven circulation called upwelling. Sensors riding on the backs of blue whales reveal that the whales can track cold plumes precisely and persistently when they are foraging.

The close relationships between upwelling and blue whale movements motivates the hypothesis that the whales move farther offshore when upwelling habitat expands farther offshore, as occurs during years with stronger wind-driven upwelling. We tested this hypothesis by tracking upwelling conditions and blue whale locations over a three-year period. As upwelling doubled over the study period, the percentage of blue whale calls originating from offshore habitat also nearly doubled. A shift in habitat occupancy offshore, where the shipping lanes exist, also brings higher risk of fatal collisions with ships.

However, there is good news for blue whales and other whale species in this region. Reducing ship speeds can greatly reduce the risk of ship-whale collisions. An innovative partnership, Protecting Blue Whales and Blue Skies, has been fostering voluntary speed reductions for large vessels over the last decade. This program has expanded to cover a great stretch of the California coast, and the growing participation of shipping companies is a powerful and welcome contribution to whale conservation.

Mapping Whale Presence in the Gulf of Mexico: Sound and Habitat Connections

Alba Solsona-Berga – asolsonaberga@ucsd.edu
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
University of California San Diego
La Jolla, CA 92037
United States

Instagram: @sripps_mbarc

Popular version of 2pAO5 – Shaping the acoustic field in the Gulf of Mexico: marine mammals linked to topography and oceanographic features
Presented at the 188th ASA Meeting
Read the abstract at https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0037682

–The research described in this Acoustics Lay Language Paper may not have yet been peer reviewed–

Exploring the Lives of the Ocean’s Deepest Divers
After the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, restoring marine mammal populations in the Gulf of Mexico became a priority. Protecting these animals starts with understanding how they use their habitat and where they go. Sperm whales and beaked whales are some of the ocean’s most extreme divers, spending much of their lives navigating the dark depths. They rely on bursts of sound called echolocation clicks to find their prey and navigate. These clicks act like acoustic fingerprints, helping us figure out where whales go and what environments they prefer.

Deepwater habitat

To track their movements, we set up 18 underwater listening stations throughout the Gulf. These instruments recorded sounds continuously for three years. By analyzing this data, we discovered patterns in where the whales appeared and how those locations were linked to oceanographic features like currents and slopes.

Video: Deploying the instruments.

Where Whales Go
Different whale species tend to favor different parts of the deep Gulf. Goose-beaked whales often stay near deep eddies and steep slopes. Gervais’ beaked whales are more likely to follow surface and midwater eddies, while sperm whales mostly stick to areas where freshwater from rivers mixes with the open ocean. They tend to avoid the tropical Loop Current, a warm flow from the Caribbean into the Gulf, that seems to create conditions less favorable for these whales.

An example of how marine mammals use different parts of the Gulf of Mexico. The maps show ocean features at three depth ranges: surface (0-250 m), mid-depth (700-1250 m), and deep (1500-3000 m). Dolphins are shown in the surface plot, sperm whales in the mid-depth plot, and goose-beaked whales in the deep plot. Colors indicate water movement, with red showing strong currents and blue showing calmer areas. Circles mark recording stations, with bigger circles showing more animals detected.

Whales Shape Their Environment
Whales don’t just adapt to their surroundings, they also shape them. Their powerful clicks, produced by the millions, bounce off the seafloor and underwater features, making their presence a key part of the local acoustic environment. Where whales occur, the acoustic environment changes, influenced both by their vocalizations and by the prey that may be present. Prey layers can influence how sound propagates through the water, adding complexity to the acoustic field. Detecting whales in specific areas helps us understand how the acoustic environment might vary under different conditions. Mapping where whales are present also reveals potential biological hotspots and helps us understand how sound behaves in these deep-sea habitats.

Why This Matters
This research is a collaboration between scientists from the United States and Mexico, supported by NOAA’s RESTORE Science Program, the Deepwater Horizon Restoration Open Ocean Marine Mammal Trustee Implementation Group, and the Office of Naval Research Task Force Ocean. These detailed maps of whale distribution are vital for identifying critical habitats and guiding conservation strategies. They help us understand how threats like oil spills, industrial activity, and environmental changes impact whale populations, allowing us to plan effective mitigation and restoration efforts to maintain healthy ecosystems.

Underwater Plains and Valleys: Using Sound to Map Where Marine Life Gathers

Brandyn Lucca – blucca@uw.edu
Bluesky: @brandynlucca.bsky.social‬
Instagram: @brandynmark
Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, Henderson Hall (HND), 1013 NE 40th St, Seattle, Washington, 98105, United States

Joseph Warren
Instagram: @warren.bioacoustics.lab
Bluesky: @warren-lab.bsky.social
Affiliation: School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences, Stony Brook University

Popular version of 2aAO9 – Active acoustic detection of fish and zooplankton along bathymetric features of the New York Bight
Presented at the 188th ASA Meeting
Read the abstract at https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0037522

–The research described in this Acoustics Lay Language Paper may not have yet been peer reviewed–

Imagine standing on the beach in New York City, looking beyond the harbor over the horizon where rolling waves meet an armada of ships lined up to unload their cargo. What remains hidden from view are the vast underwater plains, valleys, and canyons teeming with marine life beneath the surface. From a bird’s-eye view, this area forms the New York Bight, a stretch of ocean off the coast of New York City situated between southern New Jersey and eastern Long Island. This seascape offers prime real estate for animals ranging from copepods to whales.

Some animals often gather along the shelfbreak, where the relatively flat, shallow seafloor of the continental shelf dramatically changes to the deep sea. Others prefer life in a well-known ecological hotspot and one of the largest marine canyons in the world: the Hudson Canyon. Like many people, marine animals choose habitats based on the amenities they offer, but their preferences can evolve as they age or in response to environmental shifts. Some may leave the New York Bight entirely, while others may settle in undiscovered hotspots elsewhere. But how can scientists find these hotspots in the first place?

How do scientists “see” beneath the waves?
Researchers use a technique called “active acoustics” to get snapshots of where animals are in the water column across large areas that can complement other sampling methods like nets. With this approach, they send out short pulses of sound from a moving ship and measure the echoes that bounce back from the seafloor or are created from animals that live in the water column. The equipment scientists use to measure these echoes is similar to bottom-finders and fish-finding systems used by fishers and boaters. The results can reveal dense fish schools clustered along the steep walls of a canyon or zooplankton aggregations in the near-surface waters along the shelfbreak. These patterns help scientists better understand how seascapes shape habitat preferences among marine organisms (Figure 1).

Echograms are one way to visualize acoustic backscatter, with color scale units corresponding to the total energy in echoes measured from marine organisms. This echogram reveals how animals are distributed vertically in the water column along a ship transect that crossed the Hudson Canyon. The dark gray region corresponds to the seafloor.

To carry out this research, scientists measure echoes from animals in the water column, collect fish and zooplankton using nets and trawls, and measure how temperature and salinity (and other environmental factors like oxygen) vary in the ocean as you go down in depth. Researchers collected the data for this study during seasonal surveys aboard a research vessel that covered the waters south of Long Island, New York, out to the shelfbreak, approximately 140 miles away (Figure 2).

Acoustic surveys were conducted along seven transect lines (black lines) with biological and seawater sampling stations at each square point. The white lines represent isobaths, or lines of constant depth, at 25, 50, 100, 500, 100, and 2000 m. The orange and red stars indicate where the Hudson Shelf Valley and Hudson Canyon begin.

Location, location, location: Hotspots change with the seasons
The New York Bight regions with the most fish and zooplankton (as measured by our echosounders) change with the seasons. In winter and early spring, most organisms concentrated farther offshore, often along the canyon edges or beyond the shelfbreak. As summer arrives, these biological hotspots grow along the shelfbreak, especially in and around the canyons, and move closer to shore. By fall, acoustic measurements showed that fish and zooplankton spread more evenly across the continental shelf.

For fish living near the seafloor, a seasonal feature called the Mid-Atlantic Cold Pool plays a major role in their movements. This layer of cold water forms on and above the seafloor over part of the continental shelf each spring and slowly decreases in volume throughout the summer. When the Cold Pool forms, many near-bottom fish shift away from their spatial extent due to the fish having temperature preferences and gather in the Hudson Canyon, other shelfbreak canyons, inshore areas, and the Hudson Shelf Valley. As the Cold Pool shrinks in late summer, their distribution becomes more like the broader patterns observed for overall biological backscatter (Figure 3).

An example echogram of biological backscatter near the shelfbreak. The 9º (gray) and 10º (black) isotherms, or lines of constant temperature, approximate the lateral and vertical extent of the Mid-Atlantic Cold Pool that, in this case, nearly walled this aggregation off from the inshore waters on the continental shelf entirely.

From underwater sound to action: Guiding management decisions
The New York Bight is a dynamic and productive ecosystem that experiences significant fishing pressure, shipping activity, and offshore energy development. By combining acoustic surveys with biological net sampling and oceanographic measurements, scientists can identify areas that fish and zooplankton may prefer (or avoid) throughout the year. Surveys such as this one help guide management decisions that balance the economic and commercial health of the New York Bight.