Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen

Understanding the physiology of baleen whales is critical for their effective management and conservation but sampling free-living whales is exceedingly difficult. To overcome this issue, baleen was used to analyze hormone and mercury patterns, allowing for multi-year retrospective investigation int...

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Main Author: Lowe, Carley L
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openknowledge.nau.edu/id/eprint/5789/
https://openknowledge.nau.edu/id/eprint/5789/1/Lowe_2021_assessing_longitudinal_patterns_reproduction_stress_humpback.pdf
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spelling ftnortharizonaun:oai:openknowledge.nau.edu:5789 2023-05-15T15:37:01+02:00 Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen Lowe, Carley L 2021 text https://openknowledge.nau.edu/id/eprint/5789/ https://openknowledge.nau.edu/id/eprint/5789/1/Lowe_2021_assessing_longitudinal_patterns_reproduction_stress_humpback.pdf en eng https://openknowledge.nau.edu/id/eprint/5789/1/Lowe_2021_assessing_longitudinal_patterns_reproduction_stress_humpback.pdf Lowe, Carley L (2021) Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen. Doctoral thesis, Northern Arizona University. QL Zoology Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2021 ftnortharizonaun 2022-03-05T23:51:33Z Understanding the physiology of baleen whales is critical for their effective management and conservation but sampling free-living whales is exceedingly difficult. To overcome this issue, baleen was used to analyze hormone and mercury patterns, allowing for multi-year retrospective investigation into stress and reproductive physiology in humpback whales. Progesterone, an important reproductive hormone, showed an increase during periods of known pregnancy as confirmed by sighting data and strengthens the hypothesis that baleen can be used to determine pregnancy rates in humpback whales. Two glucocorticoids involved in metabolism and stress, cortisol and corticosterone, did not increase during pregnancy as seen in other mysticete species and highlights the need for additional studies into pregnancy physiology in baleen whales. Estradiol and testosterone, hormones involved in reproduction, did not show patterns of increase or decrease in females during period of known gestation or parturition. Analysis of cortisol and corticosterone patterns between whales with different fatality causes (ship strike, illness, or entanglement) showed discrepancies in glucocorticoid patterns depending on how the whale died. The whales that were fatally struck by ships had relatively low and stable glucocorticoid concentrations while a frequently entangled whale had exceptionally high corticosterone concentrations throughout the baleen. A chronically ill whale had concurrent increases in both hormones over the baleen plate until approximately six months before death when both hormones fell to very low levels. These results show that baleen analysis can be a useful tool to determine causes of death in both historical and present-day baleen plates. Mercury concentrations along the baleen plates revealed that individual prey preferences might influence baleen mercury levels more than sex or pregnancy. The female had 2-3 times higher mercury concentrations than the two males and levels peaked during the first half of lactation. The two males had similar values even though they were 31 years apart in age. Analysis of baleen allowed for a multi-year retrospective approach to determine glucocorticoid, progesterone, and mercury patterns during pregnancy and with varying causes of death in a hard to sample species. Further use of this method could result in increased understanding of baleen whale physiology during various life history events. Thesis baleen whale baleen whales Megaptera novaeangliae OpenKnowledge@NAU (Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff)
institution Open Polar
collection OpenKnowledge@NAU (Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff)
op_collection_id ftnortharizonaun
language English
topic QL Zoology
spellingShingle QL Zoology
Lowe, Carley L
Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen
topic_facet QL Zoology
description Understanding the physiology of baleen whales is critical for their effective management and conservation but sampling free-living whales is exceedingly difficult. To overcome this issue, baleen was used to analyze hormone and mercury patterns, allowing for multi-year retrospective investigation into stress and reproductive physiology in humpback whales. Progesterone, an important reproductive hormone, showed an increase during periods of known pregnancy as confirmed by sighting data and strengthens the hypothesis that baleen can be used to determine pregnancy rates in humpback whales. Two glucocorticoids involved in metabolism and stress, cortisol and corticosterone, did not increase during pregnancy as seen in other mysticete species and highlights the need for additional studies into pregnancy physiology in baleen whales. Estradiol and testosterone, hormones involved in reproduction, did not show patterns of increase or decrease in females during period of known gestation or parturition. Analysis of cortisol and corticosterone patterns between whales with different fatality causes (ship strike, illness, or entanglement) showed discrepancies in glucocorticoid patterns depending on how the whale died. The whales that were fatally struck by ships had relatively low and stable glucocorticoid concentrations while a frequently entangled whale had exceptionally high corticosterone concentrations throughout the baleen. A chronically ill whale had concurrent increases in both hormones over the baleen plate until approximately six months before death when both hormones fell to very low levels. These results show that baleen analysis can be a useful tool to determine causes of death in both historical and present-day baleen plates. Mercury concentrations along the baleen plates revealed that individual prey preferences might influence baleen mercury levels more than sex or pregnancy. The female had 2-3 times higher mercury concentrations than the two males and levels peaked during the first half of lactation. The two males had similar values even though they were 31 years apart in age. Analysis of baleen allowed for a multi-year retrospective approach to determine glucocorticoid, progesterone, and mercury patterns during pregnancy and with varying causes of death in a hard to sample species. Further use of this method could result in increased understanding of baleen whale physiology during various life history events.
format Thesis
author Lowe, Carley L
author_facet Lowe, Carley L
author_sort Lowe, Carley L
title Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen
title_short Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen
title_full Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen
title_fullStr Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen
title_full_unstemmed Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen
title_sort assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen
publishDate 2021
url https://openknowledge.nau.edu/id/eprint/5789/
https://openknowledge.nau.edu/id/eprint/5789/1/Lowe_2021_assessing_longitudinal_patterns_reproduction_stress_humpback.pdf
genre baleen whale
baleen whales
Megaptera novaeangliae
genre_facet baleen whale
baleen whales
Megaptera novaeangliae
op_relation https://openknowledge.nau.edu/id/eprint/5789/1/Lowe_2021_assessing_longitudinal_patterns_reproduction_stress_humpback.pdf
Lowe, Carley L (2021) Assessing longitudinal patterns of reproduction and stress of humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) via a novel analytical technique using baleen. Doctoral thesis, Northern Arizona University.
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