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Citation
Smith, J. and Double, M. (2023) 2022 Aerial survey data of southern right whales (Eubalaena australis) off southern Australia, Ver. 1, Australian Antarctic Data Centre - doi:10.26179/nbbz-nv97, Accessed: 2026-05-20
Title
2022 Aerial survey data of southern right whales (Eubalaena australis) off southern Australia
Data Centre
Australian Antarctic Data Centre, Australia
DOI
doi:10.26179/nbbz-nv97
Created Date
2023-06-26
Revision Date
2023-06-26
Expected Date of Data Release
2023-06-28
Data Version
1
Parent record
None

Description

Aerial surveys of southern right whales (Eubalaena australis) were undertaken off the southern Australian coast to monitor the recovery of this endangered species following extreme 19th and 20th Century commercial whaling. The aerial survey was undertaken in the coastal waters from Perth (Western Australia) to Ceduna (South Australia) between the 12th and 19th August 2022, to maintain the annual series of surveys and inform the long-term population trend. The survey resulted in a total 526 whales sighted, consisting of 247 cow-calf pairs, 31 unaccompanied adults and 1 yearling. The ‘western’ population of southern right whales in Australian waters is increasing in size (~5.3% per year based on female/calf pairs and a population estimate of 2675 whales) based on the long-term population trend data from the annual aerial surveys. This represents the majority of the Australian population given the very low numbers in the ‘eastern’ population. The 2022 surveys recorded the lowest number of unaccompanied animals (i.e. males and females without a calf) ever throughout the time-series of the annual aerial surveys since 1993 when survey coverage between Cape Leeuwin and Ceduna first began. Across this time series, there is a particularly notable decline in sightings of unaccompanied animals over the past five years. It is currently unclear what factors account for the decline in these sightings or may influence the variation in numbers of unaccompanied animals on the southern Australian coast. Lower than expected counts in the long-term data may provide evidence of a slowing population growth rate, which can only be assessed by continued annual population surveys to assess population trend data.

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Purpose

Assessing the status and trend of Australia's southern right whale populations

Quality

Photo quality will be variable and requires assessment prior to assimilation into photo-identification catalogue.

Access

These data are publicly available for download from the provided URL.

Temporal Coverages

Spatial Coverages

Data Resolution

Latitude Resolution:
10 Metre(s)
Longitude Resolution:
10 Metre(s)
Temporal Resolution:
5 Second(s)

Science Keywords

Additional Keywords

  • SOUTHERN RIGHT WHALES
  • AERIAL SURVEY

Locations

  • OCEAN > SOUTHERN OCEAN
  • CONTINENT > AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND
  • GEOGRAPHIC REGION > POLAR

Platforms

  • CESSNA 172 SKYHAWK

Instruments

  • CAMERAS

Researchers

  • smith, joshua (INVESTIGATOR)
  • double, mike (INVESTIGATOR,TECHNICAL CONTACT)

Use Constraints

This data set conforms to the CCBY Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Please follow instructions listed in the citation reference provided at http://data.aad.gov.au/aadc/metadata/citation.cfm?entry_id=NESP_2022_SRW when using these data.

Please acknowledge Joshua Smith Murdoch University and Mike Double AAD and recognise the long-standing contribution of John Bannister Western Australian Museum to this dataset.

Project

    ISO Topic

    • OCEANS
    • BIOTA

    Dataset Language

    • English

    Orignating Centre

    • Australian Antarctic Division

    Dataset Progress

    • COMPLETE

    IDN Node

    • AMD/AU
    • AMD
    • CEOS

    Publications

    • Smith, J.N., Double, M., Evans, K. and Kelly, N. (2023) Relative abundance of the ‘western’ population of southern right whales (Eubalaena australis) from an aerial survey off southern Australia: Final Report on 2022 survey., Report to the National Environmental Science Program

    Metadata Revision History

      2023-06-26 - record created by Josh Smith.

    Creative Commons License