Rutgers University and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution


Coastal New Jersey, Spring 2025


Study objectives

A Slocum G3 glider was deployed off the coast of Atlantic City, New Jersey to conduct surveys for tagged fish and baleen whales, including the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale.

Principal Investigators: Josh Kohut and Grace Saba (Rutgers University) and Mark Baumgartner (WHOI)

Analyst: Julianne Wilder







Platform location:




Analyst-reviewed species occurrence maps:




Daily analyst review:

DateSei whaleFin whaleRight whaleHumpback whale
05/13/2025
05/12/2025
05/11/2025
05/10/2025
05/09/2025
05/08/2025
05/07/2025
05/06/2025
05/05/2025
05/04/2025
05/03/2025
05/02/2025
05/01/2025
04/30/2025
04/29/2025
04/28/2025
04/27/2025
04/26/2025
04/25/2025
04/24/2025
04/23/2025

Detected
Possibly detected
Not detected


Time series:




Diel plot:




VEMCO tag detections:




Recent background noise:




Oceanographic observations:




Links to detailed information:

Automated detection data

VEMCO tag detection data

DMON/LFDCS Diagnostics

Platform diagnostics





Sounds

What types of sounds are we monitoring? Find examples of the sounds right, fin, sei and humpback whales make here.


Questions

Please email Mark Baumgartner at mbaumgartner@whoi.edu. For a general desciption of the detection system and the autonomous platforms, visit robots4whales.whoi.edu.


Acknowledgements

The Slocum glider was prepared by David Aragon, Nicole Waite, Chip Haldeman and John Kerfoot (Rutgers University). Engineering support for the DMON2 instrument deployed on this glider was provided by Jim Partan and Keenan Ball (WHOI). Support for the preparation, deployment and operation of the glider was provided by the Research and Monitoring Initiative of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection.


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