Elke Burkhardt - Academia.edu (original) (raw)

Papers by Elke Burkhardt

Research paper thumbnail of Seeking an acoustic niche for anthropogenic sound in the ocean

Epic3european Conference on Underwater Acoustics Edinburgh Uk 2012 07 02 2012 07 06, Jul 1, 2012

Both marine mammals and hydroacoustic instruments use underwater sound to communicate, navigate a... more Both marine mammals and hydroacoustic instruments use underwater sound to communicate, navigate and/or infer information about the marine environment. Concurrent timing of acoustic activity and/or the use of similar frequency regimes will thereby result in (potentially mutual) masking of acoustic signals. Earlier studies have provided evidence that masking by anthropogenic sound sources might negatively impact marine mammal population health. Hydroacoustic studies on the other hand may generate low quality data or suffer data loss as a result of interference from biological acoustic sources. This study provides an overview of the vocal characteristics of Arctic and Antarctic marine mammals, showing that each species has its own specific acoustic niche with surprisingly little frequency and/or temporal interspecific overlap. The acoustic characteristics of marine mammal vocalizations are compared with the characteristics of common hydroacoustic instrumentation, such as airguns, naval and fishery sonars, sediment and fan-beam echosounders as well as tomographic and RAFOS sources to identify overlaps and ‘open’ acoustic spaces, i.e. frequency bands and periods of low marine mammal acoustic activity. Using this information to separate biotic and anthropogenic sound is expected to contribute to a reduction of contingent adverse effects of anthropogenic sound sources on breeding, foraging and migration success of marine mammals, while at the same improving data quality of hydroacoustic studies. Nevertheless, we also caution that limiting the amount of anthropogenic sound introduced to the ocean still is paramount to a healthy acoustic ecology.

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise PS124

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS124 (Port Stanley – Port Stanley) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS95.2 (ANT-XXXI/1.2)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS95.2 (Las Palmas – Cape Town) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. In...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise PS97 (ANT-XXXI/3)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS97 (Punta Arenas – Punta Arenas) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned....

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise PS119

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS119 (Punta Arenas – Port Stanley) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise ARK-XXVII/3 (PS80/3)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise ARK-XXVII/3 (Tromsø - Bremerhaven) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned....

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise ANT-XXVIII/2

From 13 March to 09 April 2012 Germany conducted a fisheries survey on board RV Polarstern in the... more From 13 March to 09 April 2012 Germany conducted a fisheries survey on board RV Polarstern in the Scotia Sea (Elephant Island - South Shetland Island - Joinville Island area) under the auspices of CCAMLR. During this expedition, ANT-XXVIII/4, an opportunistic marine mammal survey was carried out. Data were collected for 26 days along the externally preset cruise track, resulting in 295 hrs on effort. Within the study area 248 sightings were collected, including three different species of baleen whales (fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus), humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae), and Antarctic minke whale (Balaenoptera bonaerensis) and one toothed whale species, killer whale (Orcinus orca). More than 62% of the sightings recorded were fin whales (155 sightings) which were mainly related to the Elephant Island area (116 sightings). Usual group sizes of the total fin whale sightings ranged from one to five individuals, also including young animals associated with adults during some encounters. Larger groups of more than 20 whales, and on two occasions more than 100 indivuduals, were observed as well. These large pods of fin whales were observed feeding in shallow waters (< 300 m) on the north-western shelf off Elephant Island, concordant with large aggregations of Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba). This observation suggests that Elephant Island constitutes an important feeding area for fin whales in early austral fall, with possible implications regarding the regulation of (krill) fisheries in this area.

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise ANT-XXVIII/1

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise ANT-XXIV/4

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS113 (ANT-XXXIII/4)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS113 (Punta Arenas - Bremerhaven) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned....

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS94 (ARK-XXIX/3)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS94 (Tromsø - Bremerhaven) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Inform...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS99.1 (ARK-XXX/1.1)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS99.1 (Bremerhaven - Longyearbyen) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS87 (ARK-XXVIII/4)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS87 (Tromsø - Bremerhaven) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Inform...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS93.1 (ARK-XXIX/2.1)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS93.1 (Longyearbyen - Tromsø) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Inf...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS85 (ARK-XXVIII/2)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS85 (Bremerhaven - Tromsø) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Inform...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS86 (ARK-XXVIII/3)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS86 (Tromsø - Tromsø) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Information...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS92 (ARK-XXIX/1)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS92 (Bremerhaven - Longyearbyen) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. ...

Research paper thumbnail of What is the impact of anthropogenic marine sound on the Antarctic environment? (Which risk is induced by operating scientific sonars, airguns and sound sources?)

Research paper thumbnail of Detection of marine mammals in European waters using ship-based thermography: prospectsand limitations

Mitigating the contingent effects of anthropogenic noise frequently relies on the continuous surv... more Mitigating the contingent effects of anthropogenic noise frequently relies on the continuous surveillance of the acoustic source’s environs. Recent advances in ship-based perimeter surveillance, using a state-of-theart 360° IR-scanner to generate a thermographic video stream, now allow automatic real-time detection of whales, facilitating effective observations both night and day. So far, tests proved the system’s reliable performance at ranges up to ca. 5 km in polar, sub-polar and temperate environments (waters cooler than 16°C), under low visibility (particularly night-time), and at high sea states (corresponding to Beaufort 7). Additional recent studies in subtropical waters confirm for waters up to 22°C the discriminability of whale blows at somewhat reduced, yet still sufficient, ranges. The system’s current implementation provides automatic detection, localisation, documentation and real-time verification, serving as assistant to the marine mammal observers who are thereby re...

Research paper thumbnail of MOLECULAR EVIDENCE FROM nrDNA ITS SEQUENCES THAT LAMINARIOCOLAX (PHAEOPHYCEAE, ECTOCARPALES SENSU LATO) IS A WORLDWIDE CLADE OF CLOSELY RELATED KELP ENDOPHYTES

Journal of Phycology, 1998

Marine brown algae living as endophytes in macroalgae are morphologically simple and their taxono... more Marine brown algae living as endophytes in macroalgae are morphologically simple and their taxonomy is particularly difficult. A molecular phylogeny for endophytic taxa isolated from kelps and red algae, and for putative epiphytic and free-living relatives, was inferred from partial small subunit and complete internal transcribed spacer nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences. It has revealed the following results. (1) Three species of endophytes isolated from members of the Laminariales are closely related. They form a clade together with the epi-endophytic species Laminariocolax tomentosoides (Farlow) Kylin. Members of the clade possess uniseriate plurilocular sporangia, and they may form erect filaments. Laminariocolax eckloniae sp. nov., occurring in the South African host Ecklonia maxima (Osbeck) Papenfuss, is described. The new combinations, Laminariocolax aecidioides (Rosenvinge) comb. nov. and L. macrocystis (Peters) comb. nov., are proposed for two taxa previously classified in Gononema and Streblonema, respectively. (2) The genus Laminariocolax occurs worldwide in temperate areas, and the phylogeny of the taxa studied is in agreement with biogeographic distribution. (3) Laminariocolax belongs to the Ectocarpales sensu lato. The genus is more closely related to Chordaria than to Dictyosiphon, Ectocarpus, or Scytosiphon. (4) Two brown endophytes (Streblonema spp.), isolated from red algae, are closely related to each other and may form a sister clade to Laminariocolax.

Research paper thumbnail of Seeking an acoustic niche for anthropogenic sound in the ocean

Epic3european Conference on Underwater Acoustics Edinburgh Uk 2012 07 02 2012 07 06, Jul 1, 2012

Both marine mammals and hydroacoustic instruments use underwater sound to communicate, navigate a... more Both marine mammals and hydroacoustic instruments use underwater sound to communicate, navigate and/or infer information about the marine environment. Concurrent timing of acoustic activity and/or the use of similar frequency regimes will thereby result in (potentially mutual) masking of acoustic signals. Earlier studies have provided evidence that masking by anthropogenic sound sources might negatively impact marine mammal population health. Hydroacoustic studies on the other hand may generate low quality data or suffer data loss as a result of interference from biological acoustic sources. This study provides an overview of the vocal characteristics of Arctic and Antarctic marine mammals, showing that each species has its own specific acoustic niche with surprisingly little frequency and/or temporal interspecific overlap. The acoustic characteristics of marine mammal vocalizations are compared with the characteristics of common hydroacoustic instrumentation, such as airguns, naval and fishery sonars, sediment and fan-beam echosounders as well as tomographic and RAFOS sources to identify overlaps and ‘open’ acoustic spaces, i.e. frequency bands and periods of low marine mammal acoustic activity. Using this information to separate biotic and anthropogenic sound is expected to contribute to a reduction of contingent adverse effects of anthropogenic sound sources on breeding, foraging and migration success of marine mammals, while at the same improving data quality of hydroacoustic studies. Nevertheless, we also caution that limiting the amount of anthropogenic sound introduced to the ocean still is paramount to a healthy acoustic ecology.

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise PS124

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS124 (Port Stanley – Port Stanley) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS95.2 (ANT-XXXI/1.2)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS95.2 (Las Palmas – Cape Town) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. In...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise PS97 (ANT-XXXI/3)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS97 (Punta Arenas – Punta Arenas) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned....

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise PS119

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS119 (Punta Arenas – Port Stanley) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise ARK-XXVII/3 (PS80/3)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise ARK-XXVII/3 (Tromsø - Bremerhaven) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned....

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise ANT-XXVIII/2

From 13 March to 09 April 2012 Germany conducted a fisheries survey on board RV Polarstern in the... more From 13 March to 09 April 2012 Germany conducted a fisheries survey on board RV Polarstern in the Scotia Sea (Elephant Island - South Shetland Island - Joinville Island area) under the auspices of CCAMLR. During this expedition, ANT-XXVIII/4, an opportunistic marine mammal survey was carried out. Data were collected for 26 days along the externally preset cruise track, resulting in 295 hrs on effort. Within the study area 248 sightings were collected, including three different species of baleen whales (fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus), humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae), and Antarctic minke whale (Balaenoptera bonaerensis) and one toothed whale species, killer whale (Orcinus orca). More than 62% of the sightings recorded were fin whales (155 sightings) which were mainly related to the Elephant Island area (116 sightings). Usual group sizes of the total fin whale sightings ranged from one to five individuals, also including young animals associated with adults during some encounters. Larger groups of more than 20 whales, and on two occasions more than 100 indivuduals, were observed as well. These large pods of fin whales were observed feeding in shallow waters (< 300 m) on the north-western shelf off Elephant Island, concordant with large aggregations of Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba). This observation suggests that Elephant Island constitutes an important feeding area for fin whales in early austral fall, with possible implications regarding the regulation of (krill) fisheries in this area.

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise ANT-XXVIII/1

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during POLARSTERN cruise ANT-XXIV/4

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS113 (ANT-XXXIII/4)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS113 (Punta Arenas - Bremerhaven) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned....

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS94 (ARK-XXIX/3)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS94 (Tromsø - Bremerhaven) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Inform...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS99.1 (ARK-XXX/1.1)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS99.1 (Bremerhaven - Longyearbyen) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS87 (ARK-XXVIII/4)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS87 (Tromsø - Bremerhaven) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Inform...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS93.1 (ARK-XXIX/2.1)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS93.1 (Longyearbyen - Tromsø) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Inf...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS85 (ARK-XXVIII/2)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS85 (Bremerhaven - Tromsø) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Inform...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS86 (ARK-XXVIII/3)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS86 (Tromsø - Tromsø) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. Information...

Research paper thumbnail of Whale sightings during Polarstern cruise PS92 (ARK-XXIX/1)

Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing th... more Data on whale distribution and abundance in the polar oceans is rather sparse, as implementing the standard surveying method, line-transect surveys, is challenging and costly. To overcome this problem, we initiated a program to electronically log all opportunistic cetacean sightings during all Polarstern expeditions through the nautical officer on watch. Opportunistic (visual) sightings by naked eye were logged during Polarstern Cruise PS92 (Bremerhaven - Longyearbyen) by the nautical officer on duty using a customized Software package (WALOG, WhAleLOGger) installed on a touch screen laptop located on the ship's bridge. Species were identified by naked eye or handheld binoculars (7x50) to the lowest possible taxonomical level and assigned a "certainty" level of identification. The number of animals were counted if possible or estimated for larger groups. Whenever identification to species level was not possible, the next identifiable taxonomical category was assigned. ...

Research paper thumbnail of What is the impact of anthropogenic marine sound on the Antarctic environment? (Which risk is induced by operating scientific sonars, airguns and sound sources?)

Research paper thumbnail of Detection of marine mammals in European waters using ship-based thermography: prospectsand limitations

Mitigating the contingent effects of anthropogenic noise frequently relies on the continuous surv... more Mitigating the contingent effects of anthropogenic noise frequently relies on the continuous surveillance of the acoustic source’s environs. Recent advances in ship-based perimeter surveillance, using a state-of-theart 360° IR-scanner to generate a thermographic video stream, now allow automatic real-time detection of whales, facilitating effective observations both night and day. So far, tests proved the system’s reliable performance at ranges up to ca. 5 km in polar, sub-polar and temperate environments (waters cooler than 16°C), under low visibility (particularly night-time), and at high sea states (corresponding to Beaufort 7). Additional recent studies in subtropical waters confirm for waters up to 22°C the discriminability of whale blows at somewhat reduced, yet still sufficient, ranges. The system’s current implementation provides automatic detection, localisation, documentation and real-time verification, serving as assistant to the marine mammal observers who are thereby re...

Research paper thumbnail of MOLECULAR EVIDENCE FROM nrDNA ITS SEQUENCES THAT LAMINARIOCOLAX (PHAEOPHYCEAE, ECTOCARPALES SENSU LATO) IS A WORLDWIDE CLADE OF CLOSELY RELATED KELP ENDOPHYTES

Journal of Phycology, 1998

Marine brown algae living as endophytes in macroalgae are morphologically simple and their taxono... more Marine brown algae living as endophytes in macroalgae are morphologically simple and their taxonomy is particularly difficult. A molecular phylogeny for endophytic taxa isolated from kelps and red algae, and for putative epiphytic and free-living relatives, was inferred from partial small subunit and complete internal transcribed spacer nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences. It has revealed the following results. (1) Three species of endophytes isolated from members of the Laminariales are closely related. They form a clade together with the epi-endophytic species Laminariocolax tomentosoides (Farlow) Kylin. Members of the clade possess uniseriate plurilocular sporangia, and they may form erect filaments. Laminariocolax eckloniae sp. nov., occurring in the South African host Ecklonia maxima (Osbeck) Papenfuss, is described. The new combinations, Laminariocolax aecidioides (Rosenvinge) comb. nov. and L. macrocystis (Peters) comb. nov., are proposed for two taxa previously classified in Gononema and Streblonema, respectively. (2) The genus Laminariocolax occurs worldwide in temperate areas, and the phylogeny of the taxa studied is in agreement with biogeographic distribution. (3) Laminariocolax belongs to the Ectocarpales sensu lato. The genus is more closely related to Chordaria than to Dictyosiphon, Ectocarpus, or Scytosiphon. (4) Two brown endophytes (Streblonema spp.), isolated from red algae, are closely related to each other and may form a sister clade to Laminariocolax.