Dear MARMAM Members,


My colleagues and I are pleased to share our new publication “Declining 
reproductive success in the Gulf of St Lawrence’s humpback whales (Megaptera 
novaeangliae) reflects ecosystem shifts on their feeding grounds”, now 
available in Global Change Biology.



Abstract



Climate change has resulted in physical and biological changes in the world’s 
oceans. How the effects of these changes are buffered by top predator 
populations, and therefore how much plasticity there is at the highest trophic 
levels is largely unknown. Here, endocrine profiling, longitudinal observations 
of known individuals over 15 years between 2004 and 2018, and environmental 
data are combined to examine how the reproductive success of a top marine 
predator is being affected by ecosystem change. The Gulf of St. Lawrence, 
Canada, is a major summer feeding ground for humpback whales (Megaptera 
novaeangliae) in the North Atlantic. Blubber biopsy samples (n = 185) of female 
humpback whales were used to investigate variation in pregnancy rates through 
the quantification of progesterone. Annual pregnancy rates showed considerable 
variability, with no overall change detected over the study. However, a total 
of 457 photo-identified adult female sightings records with / without calves 
were collated, and showed that annual calving rates declined significantly. The 
probability of observing cow-calf pairs was related to favourable environmental 
conditions in the previous year; measured by herring spawning stock biomass, 
Calanus spp. abundance, overall copepod abundance and phytoplankton bloom 
magnitude. Approximately 39% of identified pregnancies were unsuccessful over 
the 15 years, and the average annual pregnancy rate was higher than the average 
annual calving rate at ~37% and ~23% respectively.  Together, these data 
suggest that the declines in reproductive success could be, at least in part, 
the result of females being unable to accumulate the energy reserves necessary 
to maintain pregnancy and / or meet the energetic demands of lactation in years 
of poorer prey availability rather than solely an inability to become pregnant. 
The decline in calving rates over a period of major environmental variability 
may suggest that this population has limited resilience to such ecosystem 
change.

https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.15466

Best wishes,



Jo Kershaw


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