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    <titleInfo>
      <title>Social segregation of humpback whales in contrasted coastal and oceanic breeding habitats</title>
    </titleInfo>
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    <name type="personnal">
      <namePart type="family">Torres</namePart>
      <namePart type="given">L. G.</namePart>
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    <name type="personnal">
      <namePart type="family">Garrigue</namePart>
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    <abstract>Maternal habitat preferences of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) are well documented from decades of coastal research but oceanic areas have received less attention. Whales breeding in New Caledonia occupy both ecosystems: a coastal reef complex (South Lagoon) and oceanic seamounts (Southern Seamounts). Generalized additive models were applied to 20 years of boat-based whale observations (n = 1,526) to describe habitat preferences and permissive home range estimations were used to explicitly model spatial segregation in relation to social context. Groups with calves (n = 206) preferred shallow coastal waters throughout the season in the South Lagoon, whereas no habitat segregation was observed between groups with (n = 74) and without calves (n = 140) in the Southern Seamounts. As a result, spatial overlap between groups with and without calves was more common in the Southern Seamounts than the South Lagoon. Despite a lack of social segregation around seamounts, mother-calf pairs were proportionally more frequent in the Southern Seamounts (27%) than in the South Lagoon (16%). Photographs of the calves' dorsal flanks were analyzed to compare age and ecological markers across sites. Calves appeared older in the Southern Seamounts than in the South Lagoon but no difference in scarring or shark bites was found across sites, suggesting that calves experienced similar lifestyles and may move between offshore and coastal waters during the breeding season. This study highlights the flexible habitat-use patterns of breeding humpback whales and raises new questions about the environmental and social drivers of their presence in offshore breeding grounds.</abstract>
    <targetAudience authority="marctarget">specialized</targetAudience>
    <subject>
      <topic>breeding ground</topic>
      <topic>habitat use</topic>
      <topic>humpback whales</topic>
      <topic>Pacific Ocean</topic>
      <topic>seamounts</topic>
      <topic>social interactions</topic>
    </subject>
    <subject authority="local">
      <geographic>PACIFIQUE</geographic>
      <geographic>NOUVELLE CALEDONIE</geographic>
    </subject>
    <classification authority="local">036</classification>
    <classification authority="local">034</classification>
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      <titleInfo>
        <title>Journal of Mammalogy</title>
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      <part>
        <detail type="volume">
          <number>99</number>
        </detail>
        <detail type="volume">
          <number>1</number>
        </detail>
        <extent unit="pages">
          <list> 41-54</list>
        </extent>
      </part>
      <originInfo>
        <dateIssued>2018</dateIssued>
      </originInfo>
      <identifier type="issn">0022-2372</identifier>
    </relatedItem>
    <identifier type="uri">https://www.documentation.ird.fr/hor/fdi:010072412</identifier>
    <identifier type="doi">10.1093/jmammal/gyx185</identifier>
    <identifier type="issn">0022-2372</identifier>
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      <recordCreationDate encoding="w3cdtf">2018-04-03</recordCreationDate>
      <recordChangeDate encoding="w3cdtf">2023-07-11</recordChangeDate>
      <recordIdentifier>fdi:010072412</recordIdentifier>
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