Possible non-offspring nursing in the southern right whale, Eubalaena australis

During the austral winter, adult female southern right whales Eubalaena australis enter the South African coastal waters to give birth and raise their young. Most births take place over a 4-month period, when the females congregate in specific coastal areas or nursery grounds for up to a recorded ma...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Mammalogy
Main Authors: Best, Peter B., Elwen, Simon H., Palsbøll, Per J., Thornton, Meredith, Austin, Evan, Vinding, Katja
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11370/769134c5-ec6a-4107-b60c-4596cf6c7ecd
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/769134c5-ec6a-4107-b60c-4596cf6c7ecd
https://doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyv042
https://pure.rug.nl/ws/files/63249134/Possible_non_offspring_nursing_in_the_southern_right_whale.pdf
Description
Summary:During the austral winter, adult female southern right whales Eubalaena australis enter the South African coastal waters to give birth and raise their young. Most births take place over a 4-month period, when the females congregate in specific coastal areas or nursery grounds for up to a recorded maximum of 105 days. At this time, the density of cowtextendashcalf pairs in nursery areas can reach as high as 3.2 pairs/km2 over 26 km of coastline. Although a single young is born and suckled exclusively for 7 months to a year, recent observations on nursery grounds include 3 incidents where apparently abandoned/orphaned calves-of-the-year have been seen associating with a minimum of 2textendash3 different cowtextendashcalf pairs over periods of 11textendash38 days. Attempts to suckle from these females have been noted in 2 of the cases, with the response of the female varying from extreme avoidance to apparent tolerance. In one instance where the observations of the same trio extended over 21 days, the non-offspring appeared to compete at least equally with the offspring, even though the mother directed her evasive tactics more at the non-offspring than her own calf. At the same time, both of the calves exhibited some growth in length when compared with the size of the adult female: their subsequent survival is unknown. Non-offspring nursing in monotocous species is generally rare, and the costs to the female potentially high: this is certainly the case for seasonally feeding mysticetes such as the right whale, where the costs of lactation cannot be recovered until the cow resumes feeding about 4 months after parturition. Hence, it is perhaps not surprising that these are the first recorded observations of contemporaneous nursing attempts by offspring and non-offspring calves of any mysticete.Key Words: