Dear Colleagues,

The scientific article "Allosuckling in southern right whale calves" is 
published in Mammalian Biology.

Free download: 
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s42991-023-00392-1#citeas

Authors: Kate R. Sprogis and Fredrik Christiansen.

Abstract: Allosuckling, the suckling of milk from a non-biological mother, 
occurs in some species of mammals. Allosuckling has not been quantified in 
baleen whale calves, therefore, we examine allosuckling in southern right 
whales (SRWs; Eubalaena australis) off Australia. SRWs are listed as Endangered 
under the Australian Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 
as their numbers remain below the estimated historical abundance. On a small 
aggregation area, where there were three mother-calf pairs present, we aimed to 
quantify the proportion of time that calves allosuckled relative to the time 
spent filial suckling. To achieve this, we conducted unmanned aerial vehicle 
focal follows on mother-calf pairs and video recorded all interactions among 
pairs (n = 22 interactions, 3 h total observation time). During interactions, 
allosuckling occurred in seven interactions, and filial nursing occurred in 11 
interactions. One of the calves performed allosuckling, and it was the largest 
calf with the largest mother. The calf allosuckled from both of the 
non-biological mothers present. The average proportion of time allosuckling per 
interaction was 4% (95% CI = ± 0.01, range = 0-0.25), while filial nursing for 
the same calf was 8% (95% CI = ± 0.02, range = 0-0.37). It is important to 
understand the frequency of allosuckling, in order to quantify the energetic 
benefits for allosuckling calves and the energetic cost incurred by targeted 
non-biological mothers. This is particularly pertinent for capital breeders who 
do not replenish lost energy reserves until they migrate to their feeding 
grounds.

Citation: Sprogis, K. R., and F. Christiansen. 2024. Allosuckling in southern 
right whale calves. Mammalian Biology. 
https://doi.org/10.1007/s42991-023-00392-1


Please feel free to contact us if you have any questions.


Kind regards,


Kate Sprogis, PhD
Research Fellow
UWA Oceans Institute and School of Biological Sciences
The University of Western Australia
Albany campus, Western Australia
@KateSprogis  *  [email protected]

Recent publications:

  *   Christiansen F, Sprogis KR, Nielsen MLK, Glarou M, Bejder L (2023) Energy 
expenditure of southern right whales varies with body size, reproductive state 
and activity level. J Exp Biol. doi: 
10.1242/jeb.245137<https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/226/13/jeb245137/322683/Energy-expenditure-of-southern-right-whales-varies>
  *   Sprogis, K. R., D. Holman, P. Arranz, and F. Christiansen. 2023. Effects 
of whale-watching activities on southern right whales in Encounter Bay, South 
Australia. Marine Policy. 150:105525. 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpol.2023.105525





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