- Home
- About PWF
- Science
- Research History
- Current Studies
- Australia Research
- Calving Rates and Intervals of East Australian Female Humpback Whales
- Connectivity and Interchange Between Humpback Whale Aggregation Areas along East Australia
- Dynamics of extralimital feedingby humpback whales off Eden, NSW
- East Australia Humpback Whales
- Pacific Whale Foundation’s Southern Hemisphere Humpback Whale Catalogue
- Rate of Interchange Between East Australia and West Australia Humpback Whales
- Ecuador Research
- Interaction of Small Cetaceans with Artisanal Fisheries in Machalilla National Park
- Population, Distribution and Abundance of Humpback Whales and other Cetaceans in Machalilla National Park
- Photo-identification of dolphins in the Cojimies River Estuary
- Migratory Interchange of Humpback Whales between Peru and Ecuador
- Hawaii Research
- Distribution of Odontocetes in Maui County Waters
- Hawaiian Humpback Whale Catalogue
- Odontocetes of Maui County
- Researcher on Board Humpback Whale Program
- Sea Turtle Foraging and Resting Areas off Maui
- Social Structure of False Killer Whales in Maui County Waters
- Spinner dolphins in Maui County waters
- Other Projects
- Australia Research
- Publications
- Our Research Team
- Notes From The Field
- Donate to help fund our research
- Advocacy & Education
- How You Can Help
- Eco Cruises
- Ocean Store
Volunteers Needed for Great Maui Whale Count
If you enjoy looking out toward sea and spotting blows, breaches and other whale activity, Pacific Whale Foundation invites you to become a volunteer whale counter during the upcoming Great Whale Count, to be held on Maui on Saturday, February 25 from 8 am to noon.
An annual event and the first "whale count" of its kind, the Great Whale Count has been conducted by Pacific Whale Foundation along Maui’s shorelines for twenty years. More than 100 people volunteer to help conduct the count each year, with many participants coming from the Mainland or neighbor islands. The Great Whale Count gathers data in a systematic way about whales that can be seen within three miles of ten established shoreline observation points stretching from Kapalua to Makena, with an additional site located at Ho’okipa.
No special skills are needed to volunteer. Pacific Whale Foundation’s research team will provide the training and data recording forms. Counters are asked to bring a pair of binoculars, a lawn chair, hat, sunglasses and drinking water.
“Working under our Chief Scientist, Dr. Daniela Maldini, Pacific Whale Foundation’s research team compiled the data from past Great Whale Counts to submit the results for publication to a peer-reviewed scientific journal,” comments Greg Kaufman, President and Founder of Pacific Whale Foundation. “We are excited to continue the count with some new enhancements to add to this very useful data set about whale sightings from Maui’s shorelines.”
“The Great Whale Count provides a snapshot look at the number of whales off the coast of Maui at the peak time when the whales are present,” notes Kaufman. “Because we have conducted this count in a systematic way for two decades, we are able to compare findings from one year to another, and to correlate the findings with other studies of whale density and population off Maui.”
The counters also record the whale behaviors that are observed, numbers of pods sighted, whether there are calves in the pod, and the direction and swimming speed of the pods.
Counters are assembled from 8:00 am to 11:30, with the actual counting taking place from 8:30 am to 11:30 am. During that time, they learn about whale research methods, whale biology and recent scientific findings about whales. “Our volunteers also discover the surprising number of whales that can be seen from shore, if you simply spend the time looking,” says Kaufman.
To volunteer for the Great Maui Whale Count, please contact Michelle Viengkone at michelleviengkone@pacificwhale.org. Please include your name, daytime or cell phone number, the number of people in your group, their ages, and where you will be staying on Maui, so that the research team can assign you to the most convenient counting location. Pacific Whale Foundation’s research team will contact you with information about your assignment.
“Pacific Whale Foundation organized the first whale count in Hawai’i in 1991,” comments Kaufman. “When the Sanctuary was being established, they asked us to share our methodology and data recording protocol with them, so they could establish Ocean Counts on Oahu, Kauai, Hawaii Island and Kahoolawe. Pacific Whale Foundation continues to run the Great Whale Count on Maui."
The data from the 2012 Great Whale Count supplements data gathered during Pacific Whale Foundation’s other Hawaii whale research studies, including a theodolite station at Papawai Point Lookout from February 1 to April 15 to record vessel-whale interactions. This effort will tie into a larger research project conducted by Pacific Whale Foundation to analyze and mitigate the potential for vessel-whale collisions along Maui’s coastline.
Pacific Whale Foundation’s naturalists and captains also gather data about cetaceans encountered during all of Pacific Whale Foundation’s whalewatches and ocean ecotours. The data is uploaded with the Whale and Dolphin Tracker software developed by Pacific Whale Foundation in 2010, and is transmitted to the foundation’s research labs and also displayed in real time on Pacific Whale Foundation’s website at www.pacificwhale.org
Pacific Whale Foundation’s research team will also be working from a small boat at sea starting February 1 to gather photoidentification and distribution data on odontocetes (toothed whales and dolphins) off the coasts of Maui and Lana’i. The study will also include research on interactions and associations between humpback whales and odontocetes.
Pacific Whale Foundation also conducts studies of humpback whales in Ecuador, Tonga and along the east coast of Australia, and studies of blue whales off the coast of Chile. To learn more about Pacific Whale Foundation’s research, please visit www.pacificwhale.org.
The Great Maui Whale Count is coordinated by Pacific Whale Foundation and is part of the Maui Whale Festival, a six-month long series of whale-related events held on Maui between November and Maui. To learn more about the Maui Whale Festival, please visit www.mauiwhalefestival.org.
Image:





Comments
Celine Handbags
Find celine bag in celinebagss.Look the most up-to-date collection involving celine handbag through the nearly all well-known merchants - most a single position.Introduced your globe's limited 8 Lotus types Celine Boogie Bag, spotlight a pair of.Conditions occur along with conditions get, Celine Box Bag remains to be your must-have handbag for individuals that are generally interested popular.Basic celine bags bag, excellent traditional smiley deal with handbag.This specific Celine Phantom Bag incorporates: serial figures, proper care pamphlet, airborne debris handbag, Minute card, marking.On-line Celine Purse available for sale using no cost worldwide transport along with cheapest price tag.In recent years, your prevalence involving Celine Tote Bag breeze, nevertheless are generally limited for you to straightforward as well as inexpensive types.This coming year, the widely used growing market equipment and lighting Celine advantages involving design and style simplicity, along with Celine Tote Bag built?? via delicate natural leather, along with rapidly fascinated your pattern.