Dear MARMAN Subscribers,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am pleased to announce the publication of our new 
research article in General and Comparative Endocrinology:

Dalle Luche, G., Boggs, A.S., Kucklick, J.R., Hawker, D.W., Wisse, J.H., 
Bengtson Nash, S.B., 2021. Steroid hormone profiles and body conditions of 
migrating male humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae). General and 
Comparative Endocrinology, 113888.



ABSTRACT: Simultaneous analysis of multiple steroid hormones from remotely 
obtained blubber biopsies has the potential to concurrently provide information 
regarding stress and reproductive status from free-swimming cetaceans, while 
also investigating correlations between hormone concentrations and other health 
biomarkers. In this study we measured blubber concentration profiles of eight 
reproductive and adrenal steroid hormones (17α-hydroxy-progesterone, 
testosterone, androstenedione, progesterone, cortisol, 11-deoxy-corticosterone, 
oestrone, and oestradiol) together with body condition, as determined by the 
inverse Adipocyte Index, of 101 male humpback whales. Whales were sampled 
randomly at two time points, while migrating to and from their northeast 
Australian breeding grounds, allowing for intra- and inter-seasonal profile 
analysis. Testosterone, progesterone and cortisol together with androstenedione 
17α-hydroxyprogesterone, and oestrone concentrations (the latter quantified for 
the first time in live biopsied male humpback whales) decreased between the 
northward and southward migrations. Decreasing testosterone levels during the 
height of humpback whale conceptions suggests asynchronicity between blubber 
testosterone levels and the expected peak of male fertility. Statistically 
significant relationships between levels of certain steroid analytes were 
observed and appeared to change between the early and late breeding seasons. 
During the northward migration, testosterone, progesterone, androstenedione, 
oestrone and 17α-hydroxyprogesterone levels were positively correlated. 
Cortisol concentrations correlated positively with those of testosterone during 
the northward migration, but negatively during the southward migration. 
Androstenedione and testosterone were positively correlated with adiposity 
during the late breeding season. These hormone-hormone and hormone-adiposity 
correlations may be reflective of the activation of certain steroid hormone 
synthesis pathways, or alternatively, of concomitant physiological stimuli. As 
steroid hormones work in concert, information on multiple steroid hormones is 
needed to interpret endocrinological status and understand the relationships 
between these compounds and ancillary health markers. This study provides 
steroid hormone profiles of wild male humpback whales, as well as the first 
insight into seasonal male endocrinology as a function of adiposity.

Link to article: 
https://reader.elsevier.com/reader/sd/pii/S0016648021001817?token=EA2C90A77B9DC5776CE522A7AA04DA4D3AAE6FB671916CFFB3367F65990E714F8D7B4583AA59666C252BACA647939C6C&originRegion=us-east-1&originCreation=20210829063444

[https://ars.els-cdn.com/content/image/1-s2.0-S0016648021001817-ga1.jpg]<https://reader.elsevier.com/reader/sd/pii/S0016648021001817?token=EA2C90A77B9DC5776CE522A7AA04DA4D3AAE6FB671916CFFB3367F65990E714F8D7B4583AA59666C252BACA647939C6C&originRegion=us-east-1&originCreation=20210829063444>
Steroid hormone profiles and body conditions of migrating male humpback whales 
(Megaptera 
novaeangliae)<https://reader.elsevier.com/reader/sd/pii/S0016648021001817?token=EA2C90A77B9DC5776CE522A7AA04DA4D3AAE6FB671916CFFB3367F65990E714F8D7B4583AA59666C252BACA647939C6C&originRegion=us-east-1&originCreation=20210829063444>
Simultaneous analysis of multiple steroid hormones from remotely obtained 
blubber biopsies has the potential to concurrently provide information regar…
reader.elsevier.com


Please feel free to contact me ([email protected]) for a pdf copy of 
the paper.

Kind regards,
Greta

-
Dr. Greta Dalle Luche, PhD
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