Back to Search Start Over

(Almost) all the humpback whales of the North Pacific: A collaborative and comprehensive photo-ID dataset

Authors :
Ted Cheeseman
Ken Southerland
Jo Marie Acebes
Katherina Audley
Jay Barlow
Lars Bejder
Caitlin Birdsall
Amanda Bradford
Josie Byington
John Calambokidis
Rachel Cartwright
Jen Cedarleaf
Andrea Jacqueline García Chavez
Jens Currie
Joëlle De Weerdt
Nicole Doe
Thomas Doniol-Valcroze
Karina Dracott
Olga Filatova
Rachel Finn
Kiirsten Flynn
John Ford
Astrid Frisch-Jordán
Christine Gabriele
Beth Goodwin
Craig Hayslip
Jackie Hildering
Marie Hill
Jeff Jacobsen
Meagan Jones
Nozomi Kobayashi
Edward Lyman
Mark Malleson
Evgeny Mamaev
Pamela Martínez Loustalot
Annie Masterman
Craig Matkin
Christie McMillan
Jeff Moore
John Moran
Janet Neilson
Hayley Newell
Haruna Okabe
Marilia Olio
Adam Pack
Daniel Palacios
Heidi Pearson
Ester Quintana-Rizzo
Raul Fernando Ramírez Barragán
Nicola Ransome
Fred Sharpe
Tasli Shaw
Stephanie Stack
Iain Staniland
Jan Straley
Andrew Szabo
Suzie Teerlink
Olga Titova
Jorge Urban
Martin van Aswegen
Marcel Vinicius
Olga von Ziegesar
Briana Witteveen
Janie Wray
Kymberly Yano
Denny Zwiefelhofer
Hiram Rosales-Nanduca
M. Esther Jiménez-López
Phil Clapham
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2023.

Abstract

We present an ocean-basin-scale dataset that includes tail fluke photographic identification (photo-ID) and encounter data for the majority of living individual humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) in the North Pacific Ocean. The dataset was built through a broad collaboration combining 39 separate curated photo-ID catalogs supplemented with community science data. All available images were compared using a recently developed machine learning artificial intelligence image recognition algorithm able to rapidly and accurately detect matches between individuals. For the study period of 2001 to 2021, a total of 27,956 unique individuals were documented in 157,379 encounters, with each individual encountered, on average, in 5.6 sampling periods (i.e., breeding and feeding seasons), and with an annual average of 87.1% of whales encountered in more than one season. The combined dataset and image recognition tool represents a living and accessible resource for collaborative, basin-wide studies of a keystone marine mammal in a time of rapid ecological change.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dd1392dac6c1ebb36a453e5916c05d2e