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Stejneger's beaked whale strandings in Alaska, 1995–2020
Author(s) -
Savage Katharine N.,
BurekHuntington Kathy,
Wright Sadie K.,
Bryan Anna L.,
Sheffield Gay,
Webber Marc,
Stimmelmayr Raphaela,
Tuomi Pam,
Delaney Martha A.,
Walker William
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
marine mammal science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.723
H-Index - 78
eISSN - 1748-7692
pISSN - 0824-0469
DOI - 10.1111/mms.12780
Subject(s) - beaked whale , whale , minke whale , cetacea , biology , oceanography , fishery , balaenoptera , geology
Presented here is the first comprehensive and updated compilation of history, distribution, and findings of Stejneger's beaked whales ( Mesoplodon stejnegeri ) in Alaska. Stejneger's beaked whales are a poorly understood, elusive, deep‐diving cetacean species found in the North Pacific Ocean. Since Stejneger's beaked whale strandings data in Alaska through 1994 were last published, 35 additional strandings have been documented. Twenty‐seven animals stranded in the Aleutian Islands, seven stranded in Southcentral Alaska, and one animal stranded on St. Lawrence Island. Twenty‐two carcasses were necropsied, but only four were fresh. Seventeen of the 22 died during mass stranding events and cause of death could not be definitively determined. Barotrauma was suspected in three cases and infectious disease possibly complicated by barotrauma occurred in two cases. We documented an expansion of strandings into the northern Bering Sea, characterized a sex bias, examined stomach contents that included macroplastic, and identified parasites not previously associated with Stejneger's beaked whales. Also included are data on the largest known mass stranding of Stejneger's beaked whales, which occurred on Adak Island in 2018. The history, distribution, and findings presented here are central to further our understanding of this species.

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