Hi Marmam community,

My co-authors and I are excited to share our new study on southern sea
otter fur buoyancy across ontogeny, and how the fur buoyancy is affected by
crude oil and Dawn dishwashing detergent.

Riordan, K., Dean, A. E., Kerr, S. J., Thometz, N. M., Batac, F. I. and
Liwanag, H. E. M. (2024). A novel comparison of southern sea otter (Enhydra
lutris nereis) fur buoyancy across ontogeny. J. Exp. Biol. 227, jeb247134.
https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.247134

https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article-abstract/227/17/jeb247134/361902/A-novel-comparison-of-southern-sea-otter-Enhydra?redirectedFrom=fulltext

Abstract:
Sea otters are extremely positively buoyant and spend most of their time
resting at the water surface. It is understood that some of this buoyancy
comes from the air layer that sea otters maintain in their pelage, with the
lungs providing an additional source of positive buoyancy. Past studies
have investigated the fur buoyant force in adult sea otters; however,
little is known about the fur buoyant force in younger age classes. This
study compared ontogenetic changes in the fur buoyant force of southern sea
otter (*Enhydra lutris nereis*) pelage. We measured the fur buoyant force
of pelt samples, scaled that to the whole animal, and calculated
mass-specific fur buoyant force for six age classes: neonates (<1 month),
small pups (1–2 months), large pups (3–5 months), juveniles (6 months–1
year), subadults (1–3 years) and adults (4–9 years). Each pelt sample was
measured under three conditions: control, oiled and washed with Dawn® dish
soap. Oiled and washed pelts had a lower fur buoyant force compared with
the control pelts across all age classes. When oiled, the air layer of the
pelt is ruined and no longer provides sufficient positive buoyancy. Pelts
washed with Dawn® had higher variability in buoyant force compared with
other conditions, and the air layer was not restored consistently. When we
scaled up, we found that younger age classes were more buoyant because of
their larger surface area to volume ratio. These differences in buoyancy
may underlie variations in energetic costs and behavior among sea otters
across development.

The article is not open access, so it is available upon request!

Thank you,

*Kate Riordan*

M.S. in Biological Sciences

Biologist/Environmental Scientist

www.seaottersavvy.org/consultation-services

(805) 235-0760
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