Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our recent *open-access* publication 
in Ecology and Evolution:

Historical baleen plates indicate that once abundant Antarctic blue and fin 
whales demonstrated distinct migratory and foraging strategies

Smith, M. E. K., Ososky, J. J., Hunt, K. E., Cioffi, W. R, Read, A. J., 
Friedlaender, A. S., McCarthy, M. D., & Fleming, A. H. (2024). Historical 
baleen plates indicate that once abundant Antarctic blue and fin whales 
demonstrated distinct migratory and foraging strategies. Ecology and Evolution, 
14(5). https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11376


Abstract:


Southern hemisphere blue (Balaenoptera musculus intermedia) and fin 
(Balaenoptera physalus) whales are the largest predators in the Southern Ocean, 
with similarities in morphology and distribution. Yet, understanding of their 
life history and foraging is limited due to current low abundances and limited 
ecological data. To address these gaps, historic Antarctic blue (n = 5) and fin 
(n = 5) whale baleen plates, collected in 1947–1948 and recently rediscovered 
in the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, were analyzed for bulk 
(δ13C and δ15N) stable isotopes. Regular oscillations in isotopic ratios, 
interpreted as annual cycles, revealed that baleen plates contain approximately 
six years (14.35 ± 1.20 cm yr–1) of life history data in blue whales and four 
years (16.52 ± 1.86 cm yr–1) in fin whales. Isotopic results suggest that: 1) 
in the 1940's, blue and fin whales fed at the same trophic level but in 
slightly different habitats; 2) fin whales appear to have had more regular 
annual migrations; and 3) fin whales may have migrated to ecologically distinct 
sub-Antarctic waters annually while some blue whales may have resided 
year-round in the Southern Ocean. These results reveal differences in 
ecological niche and life history strategies between Antarctic blue and fin 
whales during a time period when their populations were more abundant than 
today, and before major human-driven climatic changes occurred in the Southern 
Ocean.

The article is available for free here:
https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.11376

Please feel free to contact us with any questions.


Thank you,

Malia E. K. Smith
Ph.D. Candidate, Emslie Lab
Department of Biology & Marine Biology
University of North Carolina Wilmington
Email: mes5...@uncw.edu

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