Demographic and physiological signals of reproductive events in humpback whales on a southwest pacific breeding ground
Logan J Pallin, Claire Garrigue, Nicholas M Kellar, C Scott Baker, Claire D Bonneville, Solène Derville, Ellen C Garland, Debbie Steel, Ari S Friedlaender

TL;DR
This study examines reproductive hormones in humpback whales from New Caledonia to understand seasonal and demographic patterns in their reproduction.
Contribution
The study provides the first evidence of endocrine patterns of estrous in live, free-ranging baleen whales using non-invasive biopsy samples.
Findings
Significant differences in progesterone, testosterone, and estradiol concentrations were found across demographic groups of female humpback whales.
The study describes endocrine patterns of estrous in live free-ranging baleen whales for the first time.
The methodological approach offers a non-invasive way to monitor reproductive physiology in wild humpback whale populations.
Abstract
Assessing the reproductive physiology via skin–blubber biopsy samples of recovering populations of marine mammals is critical for conservation and management. We used an extensive blubber archive and associated demographic data to assess the seasonal changes in three reproductive hormones for humpback whales on a southwest Pacific breeding ground. The field of marine mammal conservation has dramatically benefited from the rapid advancement of methods to assess the reproductive physiology of individuals and populations from steroid hormones isolated from minimally invasive skin–blubber biopsy samples. Historically, this vital information was only available from complete anatomical and physiological investigations of samples collected during commercial or indigenous whaling. Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) are a migratory, cosmopolitan species that reproduce in warm,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRecycled Aggregate Concrete Performance
