State-space modeled satellite tracking data for New Zealand (n = 25, in purple) and Australian (n = 12, in orange) southern right whales. Credit: Global Ecology and Conservation (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.gecco.2025.e03788
Australian southern right whales visit a broader range of foraging habitats compared to the neighboring New Zealand population, according to a team of international researchers.
Dr. Kate Sprogis, from The University of Western Australia's Oceans Institute and School of Biological Sciences, collaborated on the new study led by the University of Auckland/Waipapa Taumata Rau and in Global Ecology and Conservation.
"We wanted to understand where the whales' feeding grounds are and how they use them to help inform conservation efforts," Dr. Sprogis said. "Historically southern right whales from Australia were thought to head south in summer to feed in the Southern Ocean between Australia and Antarctica."
Researchers satellite-tracked 37 southern right whales from calving grounds off Australia and NZ. The Australian whales made vast east-west movements across the Southern Ocean but also made southerly movements, and the NZ whales headed north-west to the Southern Ocean south of Australia to feed.
The most important feeding areas for the NZ whales was south of Australia, while Australian whales used this region and also migrated west to French territories like the Kerguelen and Crozet Islands, and further south to the Antarctic ice edge.
"The Australian whales visited a wider variety of habitats, including Antarctic waters, which may provide greater resilience in an increasingly unpredictable ocean environment," Dr. Sprogis said.
Both populations fed near major oceanic fronts, sharp boundaries between different water masses, where prey tends to concentrate.
However, the main feeding area for the NZ whales, which is also key to Australian whales, is in waters south of Australia and currently falls outside recognized international conservation efforts.
"We found similarities and differences in their foraging strategies, and the differences in foraging locations may have implications on continued population recovery under climate changes," Dr. Sprogis said.
"As the Southern Ocean continues to be impacted by climate change, ongoing monitoring of these populations is essential to understand how changing conditions may shape the recovery and long-term resilience of the species."
More information: Leena Riekkola et al, Large-scale differences, mesoscale similarities: Neighbouring marine predator populations provide insights into Southern Ocean productivity, Global Ecology and Conservation (2025).
Journal information: Global Ecology and Conservation
Provided by University of Western Australia