Introduction

In summer, Antarctica is surrounded by a sea ice cover comprising ~3–4 million km2 of generally low concentration sea ice that forms productive and dynamic habitats for many species1,2. This ecosystem is characterized by dynamic coupling among sea ice, krill and higher trophic level predators, including Antarctic minke whales (Balaenoptera bonaerensis)3,4. Antarctic minke whales have a circumpolar distribution in the Southern Ocean and in the austral summer have been routinely observed in both waters adjacent to and inside the sea ice edge, where they feed predominantly on krill5. Deriving precise and unbiased estimates of abundance of cetacean species in the Antarctic region is central for understanding impacts of climate change on polar marine ecosystems, as well as for Southern Ocean ecosystem management including, specifically, the conservation and management mandate of the International Whaling Commission (IWC)6,7, particularly as this species is subject to a contentious scientific (“Special Permit”) whaling by Japan8.

Under the auspices of the IWC, cetacean sightings survey data, with the primary purpose of estimating Antarctic minke whale abundance, have been collected over more than three decades in the Southern Ocean, in the open water between 60°S and the summer ice edge (namely, IWC's International Decades of Cetacean Research and Southern Ocean Whale and Ecosystem Research Programmes, IDCR/SOWER surveys). Each summer, vessels surveyed 30–60° of longitude, completing a circumpolar survey in six or 12 years; three of such complete circumpolar surveys have been completed. These surveys represent a globally unique dataset with which to explore impact of climate change and effects of past and present human harvest, on these marine predators. Estimates of circumpolar abundance of Antarctic minke whales in open waters between 60°S and the ice edge were recently derived from IDCR/SOWER sightings data9. These surveys have, however, been limited in their ability to rigorously survey areas poleward from the ice edge, because survey ships are typically insufficiently ice-strengthened to survey within sea ice. The fact of minke whale presence within the marginal ice zone (MIZ) and interior sea ice pack has been known for decades10 and, therefore, IDCR/SOWER estimates from 60°S to the ice edge have long been recognized to be minimum estimates (i.e., negatively biased to some degree6). However, protocols for management decisions such as those outlined in the IWC's management schedule – which would also include judging whether the take by the contentious Japanese “scientific” whaling continues to remain at very small fractions of population size – work under the assumption that changes in estimates of minimum abundance over time will serve as a good proxy from which to infer population trends. However, changing ice conditions might invalidate this assumption.

Point estimates of circumpolar minimum abundance suggest a decline of ~30% (95% CI -13, 57) from the late 1980s and throughout the following decade and a half9, but the trend is not statistically significant and large variance around these estimates makes it difficult to draw strong conclusions. At a more regional scale, statistically significant decreases in abundance have been observed around the Antarctic Peninsula and large embayments, such as the Ross and Weddell Seas, between the respective years each area was surveyed9. (Given genetic evidence for some circumpolar population structure9, there is no reason to suppose that any changes in regional abundance would occur uniformly throughout the circumpolar area.) For example, in the Weddell Sea (IWC's Management Area II; 60°W–0°), the local abundance of minke whales early within the years of 1997, 1998 and 2000 (overall abundance estimate for the area derived from those years) dropped to a proportion of 0.48 (95% CI 0.3, 0.76) of the abundance estimated in early 1987 (confidence interval does not consider process error)9.

A number of theories, none mutually exclusive, have been advanced to explain the difference in minke whale abundance estimates between the late 1980s and 1990s in various Southern Ocean sectors9. Perhaps in some years, in some locations, surveys either encountered or missed, by chance, higher densities of animals that were moving longitudinally. Equally, it may be that ice conditions differed from year to year and differing proportions of the total number of animals were available to be counted. Or, perhaps, the change in estimates reflects a real decline in the overall population. There is little chance to test these hypotheses retrospectively, but exploring present relationships between minke whales and sea ice can highlight potential reasons for shifts in abundance estimates and help to build more robust survey methods for the future.

To extend survey coverage further than the scope of the IDCR/SOWER surveys, we conducted the first wide-scale surveys for cetaceans from icebreaker-supported helicopters, encompassing over 26,000 km of aerial survey effort, over two summers, from the German icebreaker, RV Polarstern11. Here we present the first quantitative comparison of minke whale densities in ice-covered and adjacent ice-free waters along the entire longitudinal extent of the Weddell Sea (see Methods).

Results

According to a simple model of relative abundance (i.e., not corrected for perception or availability bias) as a function of distance from the ice edge, most minke whales were found at the ice edge boundary (defined here as the 15% ice concentration contour observed in satellite data), Fig. 1. This new information on minke whale distribution is consistent with previous reports in the Weddell Sea of larger-density patches of Antarctic krill extending 13 km inside the ice boundary12 that likely influence baleen whale distribution5.

Figure 1
figure 1

Relative abundance of Antarctic minke whales in 25 km distance bins (negative distances indicate areas inside sea ice edge) for the areas both east and west of 30°W.

Dotted and solid lines indicate the combined areas of sea ice and open water in each 25 km distance bin.

A generalized additive model with a three-variable (longitude, satellite sea ice concentration and distance to the sea ice edge) tensor product smooth was selected to describe the distribution of minke whale densities across the Weddell Sea region. Our results suggest that ~20% (95% CI 4, 57) of the minke whales in the Weddell Sea region could be located in the ice-covered and difficult-to-survey MIZ and further into the ice pack (based on the assumption that all animals on the trackline are seen, in both open water and inside sea ice regions; spatial distribution of predicted densities are shown in Fig. 2). There is substantial uncertainty around this point estimate, but as a starting point for discussion, our results suggest that the proportion of whales inside the ice could be roughly half of the ~50% decline in abundance between IDCR/SOWER surveys in the Weddell Sea region during the late-1980s and late 1990s9.

Figure 2
figure 2

Density estimates of Antarctic minke whales throughout the Weddell Sea survey region (assuming certain trackline detection probability, both inside and outside the ice).

Each point estimate comprises a 400 km2 square cell. Figure was produced using package mgcv in R and plotted in ArcGIS 9.3.1.

Discussion

The results presented in this study may inform research on summer habitat preferences and ecology of Antarctic minke whales, but here we are primarily concerned with the operational implications of their distribution and abundance on open-water surveys and any subsequent biases that might be introduced. Our icebreaker-supported helicopter surveys revealed that the proportion of Antarctic minke whales found in the difficult-to-survey sea ice zone is large, relative to the observed decline in whales between the last two circumpolar IDCR/SOWER ship surveys9. To be clear, this is certainly not to suggest that the proportion of animals estimated to be in ice alone explains the decrease in abundance in the Weddell Sea region between 1987 and a combined estimate from 1997, 1998 and 2000. There is no evidence to suggest that this species has not occupied sea ice habitats over evolutionary timescales, only to have changed that preference over the last thirty or so years. We are simply noting that the minimum number and proportion of whales in the sea ice zone are large relative to the observed decline and cannot be considered a negligible fraction.

Using historical satellite images of the Antarctic sea ice extent, we found that the width of the MIZ (along the gradient from open water through to fast ice) might vary by as much as 50% from one year to the next in a given region (Fig. 3). Therefore, one would expect the peak in densities of minke whales near the ice edge (Fig. 12), inferred from aerial survey data, could be inconsistently accessible to IDCR/SOWER surveys due to intra- and inter-annual heterogeneity in sea ice conditions and the vagaries of ice conditions could make this potential peak available or unavailable to survey. IDCR/SOWER protocols involved stopping sighting surveys when ships slow down to navigate around ice6. Here we show that the surveys' operational threshold for navigational safety occurred precisely where whales were most likely to be found (Fig. 2).

Figure 3
figure 3

The width of the, MIZ as defined by the region of very-open pack ice (0–30% ice cover) in January for five sectors of the Southern Ocean.

The width of the MIZ has experienced no or little significant trends over the past 30 years in any region. However, the variability in the width of the MIZ has a high degree of variability, such that for year to year the size of the MIZ may vary by as much as 50%. Amund/Bell refers to the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Sea sector.

IWC management tools only require a minimum abundance estimate and are therefore robust to surveying only a fraction of the population, but our discovery calls into question the reliability of that relative abundance estimate for inferring long-term trends, either for immediate management purposes or for predicting responses of whales to a changing climate. Our findings substantiate previous anecdotal evidence of a strong affinity of minke whales with sea ice10. The coupling among minke whales, sea ice and krill suggests that the whales are likely be sensitive to changes in ice conditions over time2,5, which could have an impact on the future of the species. Profound changes to the physical and biological oceanography have been observed in the Antarctic7,13 and these have led to complex changes to the duration and timing of sea ice season throughout the circumpolar region14,15 (Fig. 4). Our surveys and survey methodology provide a starting point for evaluating response of minke whales to changes in sea ice conditions.

Figure 4
figure 4

Trends in average December-February sea ice concentration for 1979–2007 from satellite passive microwave data using the Bootstrap algorithm22.

Large declines in summer sea ice concentration have occurred along the Antarctic Peninsula and in the Amundsen and Bellingshausen Seas, while ice concentration has increased in the western Ross Sea. Figure was produced in Interactive Data Language.

Our results serve as a cautionary tale about repurposing time series data to make inferences about environmental or ecological trends in response to climate change16. As analysts worldwide are tasked with answering biodiversity and climate-related questions, repurposed time series of data may not be sufficient to the task at hand, largely because they assume, untenably, that the proportion of the population surveyed has remained constant over time. To understand climate-mediated ecological changes, we need either a series of relative abundances, in which the proportion of the population remains constant through time–a way of quantifying change in proportion sampled in relative abundance estimates–or a series of absolute abundance estimates. Here we show that generating absolute abundance estimates, i.e., that representing the entire population size, would have to include surveying the sea ice zone using icebreaker-supported helicopters or using fixed-wing aircraft operating from airfields on the continent (with provision to estimate both perception and availability bias). Our results imply that detecting trends in total minke whale abundance and predicting species-level responses to changes in sea ice or other environmental drivers will be far more challenging and expensive than merely conducting circumpolar ship-board surveys in open water.

Regional-level survey data are required to be collected multiple times over the duration of a circumpolar survey to account for region-level variances in animals (i.e., process error) in order to properly interpret long-term patterns in Antarctic minke whale abundance and distribution. Given the statistical noise inherent in estimating whale abundance, it can take years or decades to detect a declining population17. Here we show that changing bias and uncertainty in existing whale population trend data could approach a similar magnitude to the suspected decline and that existing sighting survey data may be inadequate to discriminate between true, smaller declines and shifts in distribution over various geographical and temporal scales. Our observations are timely, given that the circumpolar level results of the IDCR/SOWER surveys are now more than a decade out of date, the program has ended and there is no plan to fund follow-on work. A definitive answer to the trends in minke whale abundance is unlikely to become available without a massive increase in funding for simultaneous ship-board surveys in open water and aerial surveys over sea ice-covered areas, while accounting for biases introduced by various diving behaviors across different sea ice habitats. Trend estimates inferred from time series of whale abundance from open-water-only surveys are unlikely to be robust to sampling non-constant proportions of the population due to climate-driven changes to sea ice. The changing physical environment of the Southern Ocean needs to be better integrated into management and conservation strategies for Antarctic minke whales and that will involve a candid conversation about the true cost of monitoring throughout the species' range.

Methods

Field methods

Surveys were conducted from a helicopter BO-105 deployed from RV Polarstern from 1 December 2006 to 26 January 2007 and from 6 December 2008 to 3 January 2009 and covered 26,416 km of trackline11. Field protocols followed standard line transect distance sampling methodology18. Generally, the survey tracklines were planned in an ad hoc manner a few hours prior to departure, covering a rectangular shape and lasting around 2 hours. The orientation and placement of the survey design was independent of whale distribution, but was adapted depending on available flight time, changing weather and ice conditions and the course of the vessel through the ice. In some areas, the surveys were pre-designed as parallel track-lines with a random starting point following depth gradients.

Surveys were conducted at an approximate altitude of 183 m at a speed of 80 km/h. One or two observers were positioned in the left and right back seats of the helicopter and an additional observer sat in the front left seat of the helicopter and observed the area ahead, focusing on the transect line. The helicopter's position was stored every 4 seconds. Information on sea state (Beaufort Sea state scale), cloud cover (in octaves), glare (strength and area affected), ice coverage (in percent) and overall sighting conditions (good, moderate, poor) was recorded at the beginning of each survey and whenever conditions changed. Ice coverage was averaged for a search area 1 km in front of the helicopter, assessed by the front observer. For each cetacean sighting the following data was recorded: location, distance to trackline, species, group size, group composition, behavior, cue, swimming direction and reaction to the helicopter.

Ice covariate data

Ice concentration observed along the trackline was recorded by the observers aboard the helicopter. Distance (in km) to the marginal ice edge was derived post hoc from the data using satellite remote sensing from daily, 6.25 km resolution ice concentration images collected by the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer for EOS (AMSR-E) satellite sensor and published by the Institute of Environmental Physics, University of Bremen19. The observer-derived estimate for ice concentration was tested in subsequent distance analyses.

The ice edge was defined for each day that transects were flown by the smooth line inscribing the 15% ice concentration margin, which is a standard definition in studies of sea ice20. The position of the ice edge was then estimated in each satellite image using ArcGIS 9.3.1 Spatial Analyst functions (Environmental Systems Research Institute, Inc, Redlands, California, 2009) by selecting the largest polygon of contiguous water pixels having at least 15% ice concentration (i.e. the polygon encompassing the land-fast ice), extracting the outermost edge and smoothing it using the Spatial Analyst “Boundary Clean” operator with the default parameters. Finally, the Marine Geospatial Ecology Tools software21 was used to match whale sightings and survey segments to satellite images and calculate the distance to the closest ice edge for each sighting and survey segment midpoint (see below for a description of the survey segments).

Changes in sea ice concentration over last 40 years

We examined spatio-temporal variability of sea ice since 1979 in two ways. First, we plotted the size of the MIZ throughout the Antarctic since 1979 from satellite passive microwave sea ice concentration estimates22. We examined the data for evidence of decadal-scale changes in the region between 5 and 30% ice concentration (i.e., in the vicinity of the ice edge, where minke whales are found but that are difficult to survey using conventional ship-board surveys). We acknowledge that such a definition is arbitrary, but for our purposes, it provides a useful measure of the variability of the MIZ. Determining the size of the MIZ is problematic with passive microwave data as ice concentration is often underestimated in summer and low concentrations near the ice edge are not deemed particularly reliable23. Hence, the ice edge is most often defined as the 15% concentration contour. We used February monthly average ice concentration data determined using the bootstrap algorithm available from the National Snow and Ice Data Center24. The second way we considered changes in sea ice patterns was to plot changes in ice concentration, using methods described in previous assessments15, but restricting inference to the season (Dec 15–Feb 15) in which IWC whale surveys take place.

Statistical analysis of minke whale and sea ice data

The distribution of different densities of Antarctic minke whales around the sea ice edge in the study area was estimated from line transect data following conventional distance sampling approaches18. Due to small sample sizes, line transect data from both survey years were pooled for distance analysis (n = 62 in 2006/07, n = 32 in 2008/09). Sightings that were judged to be either minke (n = 82) or ‘like’ minke whale (n = 2) were included in the analysis. Although there may be differences in both the ability of observers to see minke whales on the trackline across various concentrations and types of sea ice (i.e., perception bias) or the diving behaviour of whales in various ice habitats (i.e., availability bias), such information is currently unavailable. (It is hoped recent advances in satellite and depth-recording tags deployed on Antarctic minke whales may help inform on availability bias for future analyses25. Therefore, as the survey was single-platform, the probability of detection on the trackline, i.e., g(0), was assumed to be 1 for the entire survey region, with a half-normal detection function. Environmental covariates (i.e., multiple covariate distance sampling, MCDS18), such as sighting conditions and observer judged sea ice concentrations, were tested and found not to contribute to the distance analysis (judged using AIC).

Each transect was split into segments of approximately 30 nautical miles in length to minimise spatial autocorrelation (assumption tested by checking residuals)26. An effective strip half width (assumed to be doubled when observers were present on both sides of the aircraft) was estimated from the detection function for each transect segment; whale densities were calculated based on the number of animals counted in each segment and the effective strip area (i.e., segment length × the effect strip width).

A simple estimate of the relative abundance of minke whales, as a function of distance from the ice edge, up to 500 km, was derived from segment-level density estimates and the position of the sea ice boundary on the day each segment was flown. The distance from the centre of each transect segment to the sea ice boundary was allocated to 25 km bins. Negative distances refer to areas inside of ice boundary. A mean relative density was estimated from segments in each 25 km bin, weighted by the summed effective strip area. The total area of ice and water within each binned distance range was estimated using AMSR-E sea ice data for January 1 2007 (nominated as a representative day for the two years of surveys). The relative abundance of animals in each distance bin was then estimated by multiplying area in each bin by mean relative density. Given the error involved in locating that actual sea ice boundary using satellite data, we tested the sensitivity of this result to differing distances to the putative sea ice boundary; the ‘peak’ in density of minke whales near the supposed sea ice boundary was robust to up to 100 km of random noise added to the distances to this feature (larger amounts of noise were not tested).

A model-based approach27 was used to predict for the densities of minke whales across the Weddell Sea region, up to 500 km on either side of the ice edge. This is a common approach to estimate densities and abundances when track designs deviate substantially from ideal design-based principles. Densities were modelled using a generalized additive model (GAM) using the mgcv library28 in R (R Core Development Team, R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna), in particular, a tensor product smooth with three variables, namely longitude, the great circle distance to the ice edge and a satellite-derived estimate of ice concentration, with sea ice data from each day the effort was undertaken. Model selection was via REML and overdispersion in sighting counts was accounted for with the Tweedie distribution26. Density predictions were made at the scale of the sea ice data (6.25 km grid); variance of abundance generated using the spatial model was estimated using methods described previously26. Given whale densities predicted by the GAM for each grid point and the size of the study area (i.e., the prediction grid shown in Fig. 2), we estimate abundance of 2500 minkes (CV = 0.90) inside the sea ice zone and 8500 minkes (CV = 0.56) in adjacent, ice-free waters, given no additional information on availability or perception bias in either region. Assuming no difference in either perception or availability bias with sea ice concentration (or any other unmodelled covariate), this implies that ~20% (95% CI 4, 57; interval derived using bootstrap) of the Antarctic minke whales we estimated to be found in our study area were distributed inside of the sea ice zone in the Weddell Sea region.