University of Auckland researcher Dr Emma Carroll said the recovery of right whales around New Zealand was a good example of understanding what this meant for conservation.
In an earlier major study, she and colleagues revealed how migratory behaviour among the whales was learned by calves from their mother in the first year of life.
Calves were born in their mother's preferred wintering ground, and then travelled with their mother to her preferred summer feeding ground.
While mainland New Zealand long offered the species a good wintering ground – it's estimated there were once some 30,000 Southern right whales in our waters – that changed when whaling throughout the 1800s almost drove them to extinction.
"When right whales that visited mainland New Zealand in winter to breed and calve were killed off by whaling, the cultural knowledge of this area as a good wintering ground also disappeared," Carroll said.
"This is why we see many right whales in the subantarctic Auckland and Campbell Islands, but few around mainland New Zealand - the whales just don't learn about it anymore."
Because of our protection of the subantarctics, its New Zealand population had recovered to an estimated 2000 whales, as at 2009.
"There have been a handful of female right whales that have returned across years to calve around mainland New Zealand," she said.