Dear Colleagues,

My co-authors at Cascadia Research Collective and I recently published a
new paper on killer whale predatory scarring in blue, humpback and grey
whales in the eastern North Pacific.

Corsi, E., Calambokidis, J., Flynn, K. R., & Steiger, G. H. (2021). Killer
whale predatory
scarring on mysticetes: A comparison of rake marks among blue, humpback,
and gray whales in the eastern North Pacific. Marine Mammal Science, 1–12.
https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.12863

Abstract:

We investigated the predator–prey relationship between baleen whales and
killer whales by observing predatory scarring (rake marks) on the tail
flukes of three mysticete species from the eastern North Pacific Ocean:
humpback, blue, and gray whales. We integrated both qualitative scores and
new quantitative measures to compare predatory scarring left by killer
whales on the three species. We found statistically significant
interspecies differences in incidence, location, and accumulation rates of
scarring. Gray whales showed a higher incidence of predatory scarring
compared to the other two species. Humpback and gray whales bore most of
their rake marks on the trailing edge of the tail fluke, while blue whales
showed more evidence of predatory scarring on the leading edge of the
fluke, potentially consistent with previously hypothesized theories of flee
versus fight responses to killer whales for different mysticete species. Of
whales with scarring, blue whales were twice as likely to suffer from fluke
mutilation compared to humpback and gray whales. Humpback and gray whales
were also significantly more likely to accumulate new rake marks over the
years compared to blue whales. We examine how these differences provide
insight into the prey-specific hunting behavior of killer whales.

Please feel free to contact me at [email protected] or our corresponding
author, John Calambokidis, at [email protected] if you have
any questions.

Best regards,

-- 

*Enrico Corsi*

_________________________________________

Biology PhD student - Florida International University, Miami, FL, USA

Department of Biological Sciences - Marine Conservation Ecology Lab, North
Miami, FL, USA
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