Dear colleagues,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share with you the publication of our
newly published article:

Vermeulen,E., Wilkinson, C., Best, P.B., Findlay, K. 2025. Four decades of
annual monitoring reveal declining reproductive success of migratory baleen
whale. Scientific Reports 15: 34713

Abstract:
Understanding and mitigating threats to species survival relies on the
ability to track key demographic processes over time. Among these
processes, reproduction stands out as a primary biological driver of
population growth and resilience. Multiple factors affect reproductive
success, including environmental variables and resource availability.
Long-term trends in reproductive parameters of long-lived species can thus
serve as indicators of ecosystem health over meaningful timescales. This
study analyses the reproductive performance of southern right whales
(*Eubalaena
australis*) in South Africa using forty years of individual sighting
histories. Results reveal that the median and average calving intervals
increased post-2010, reaching an average maximum of 7.2 years in 2022. The
average calving rate decreased significantly across the four decades, from
0.48 calves/year in the 1980s to 0.19 calves/year in the 2010s. Although
based on observational data, these findings align with the hypothesis of a
trade-off linked to the reduced maternal body condition in this population,
likely indicative of diminished foraging success associated with recorded
regional Antarctic sea ice declines and reduced prey availability. The
study adds to the growing evidence that baleen whale reproduction is
influenced by environmental change, reinforcing the need for long-term
monitoring to understand population dynamics and their potential role as
sentinels of ocean health.

The paper is open access and can be downloaded here
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1038/s41598-025-18252-y?utm_source=rct_congratemailt&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=oa_20251006&utm_content=10.1038%2Fs41598-025-18252-y>

With kind regards,

Els

Dr Els Vermeulen

Senior Lecturer and Research Manager

Mammal Research Institute Whale Unit

Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences

University of Pretoria, South Africa

+27 (0)60 9714301 / [email protected]

https://www.mammalresearchinstitute.science/whale-unit

“For the love of whales, for the future of our oceans”

-- 
This message and attachments are subject to a disclaimer.

Please refer to 
http://upnet.up.ac.za/services/it/documentation/docs/004167.pdf 
<http://upnet.up.ac.za/services/it/documentation/docs/004167.pdf> for
full 
details.
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