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Scientists attach camera to 'boss' humpback before it starts multi-whale fight

Whale bullfight caught off Queensland coast

It's a view of male bravado typically only seen from afar, under a torrent of white water.

Three humpback whale bulls — one of which has a hi-tech camera attached to its back — fight for the affection of a female.

"What this male was doing was just going from one group of whales to another," manager of Griffith University's Whales and Climate Program Dr Olaf Meynecke said.

Dr Meynecke's team captured the vision with a suction-cap camera off the Gold Coast last month, at the end of a season marked by unusual migration patterns.

Weather pattern brings short season

Dr Meynecke said Queensland's whale migration season started and finished several weeks earlier than usual, with a "sharp decline in numbers" passing the Gold Coast by mid-October.

A humpback whale calf seen at Hervey Bay in September. (Supplied: Pete Lynch)

"We've got these fluctuations that happen every couple of years, which we've seen with previous data we've already had over the past 10 years," he said.

"This year it was quite strong ... we didn't have that extreme five or seven years ago when we had our last La Niña event."

A shifting East Australian Current (EAC) — which serves as a navigation tool for migrating humpbacks — meant humpbacks were moving further offshore.

Marine researcher Dr Olaf Meynecke runs research out of the Gold Coast. (ABC Gold Coast: Dominic Cansdale)

But Dr Meynecke said whales might be moving further south earlier to search for food.

"We're thinking they may take advantage of possible better chances to get food during La Niña years," he said.

"This causes a problem for mums and calves of course because they have some very young calves that can't go down south that quickly because they're too small."

Tours place bets on 2022

Manager of Sea World Cruises, Anthony Ardern said 2021 has been a tough year, with fewer tourists on their whale tours.

"We've had predominantly border shutdowns the entire way through this winter period, this whale watch season," he said.

The humpback population has made a remarkable recovery since commercial finishing was phased out 60 years ago.

Once just a few hundred strong, it's estimated the east coast population now boasts between 27,000 to 35,000 humpbacks.

While COVID-19 hasn't hassled the whales, Mr Ardern said he has placed his hopes in a bumper 2022 season.

"We've been relying for the last two seasons on ultra local markets, so Brisbane and Gold Coast and that's it," he said.

"The market is pretty well exhausted now so we're looking forward to the borders being opened."

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