Dear MARMAM community,
My coauthors and I are pleased to announce the publication of our paper, 
'Genetic identifications challenge our assumptions of physical development and 
mother-calf associations and separation times: a case study of the North 
Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis)' in a special issue of Mammalian 
Biology.
Philip K. Hamilton, Brenna A. Frasier, Lisa A. Conger, R. Clay George, 
Katharine A. Jackson, Timothy R. Frasier
You can find the article here<https://rdcu.be/cFoPr>.
While photo-identification is an effective tool to monitor individuals in wild 
populations, it has limitations. Specifically, it cannot be applied to very 
young animals before their identifying features have stabilized or to dead, 
decomposed animals. These shortfalls leave gaps in our understanding of 
survival, parentage, age structure, physical development, and behavioral 
variability. Here we report on 13 case studies of North Atlantic right whale, 
Eubalaena glacialis, calves that required genetics to track their life history 
data. These case studies revealed unexpected variations in mother-calf 
associations and separation times, as well as calf physical development. Prior 
to this study, calves were assumed to have died if their mothers were always 
alone on the feeding ground in the calf's birth year. Using genetics and 
photo-identification, four such calves were discovered to be alive; two of the 
four possibly weaned earlier than expected at 7.5-8.0 months. To put these 
early separations in context, photo-identification data were queried and 
revealed that mothers and calves are seen apart from each other on the feeding 
grounds in 10-40% of all spring/summer sightings; previously, there were no 
published data on how often pairs are seen apart in the calf's birth year. Two 
dead whales initially logged as calves of the year were discovered to be 
juveniles, thus allowing skewed survival estimates for calves of the year to be 
corrected. Genetically sampling animals early in their lives before they 
disperse or separate from their mothers provides an important means of 
individual identification at a time when photo-identification is not reliable.

The data behind this paper took years to collect and required the collaboration 
of many individuals and organizations along the east coast of North America. It 
serves as an excellent example of the power of working together.

Philip

Philip Hamilton
Senior Scientist
Kraus Marine Mammal Conservation Program
Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life
New England Aquarium
Central Wharf
Boston, MA 02110
(617) 973-5253
(802) 387-5277
[cid:[email protected]]

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