Aseasonal Migration of a Northern Bottlenose Whale Provides Support for the Skin Molt Migration Hypothesis

IF 2.3 2区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY
K. J. Lefort, L. Storrie, N. E. Hussey, S. H. Ferguson
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Abstract

Why animals migrate is a fundamental question in biology. While the adaptive significance of some animal migrations is well understood (e.g., to find food, to pursue more-favorable habitats, to spawn, or to give birth), others remain unknown. The adaptive significance of whale migration, for example, is unresolved and multiple hypotheses have been proposed to explain it. One recently proposed hypothesis that challenges the long-standing “feeding-breeding” whale migration model is a “feeding-molting” model, where whales undertake latitudinal migrations to warmer waters to molt skin. In July 2019, we attached satellite-tracking tags to northern bottlenose whales (Hyperoodon ampullatus) in the Canadian Arctic. One of these tagged whales completed a round-trip movement between the Arctic and the temperate western North Atlantic, traveling 7281 km in 67 days (and spanning 27° of latitude). The whale was tagged in sea-surface temperatures of ~4°C, but migrated south, reaching ~23°C surface waters, where it remained for 7 days before returning to the Arctic. The whale's occupancy of warm water was accompanied by a distinct shift in dive behavior, remaining near the ocean's surface. Four other tagged whales initiated similar long-distance movements. We conclude that feeding or breeding were unlikely reasons for this movement and that northern bottlenose whales migrate to warmer latitudes to molt skin.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
3.80%
发文量
1027
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Ecology and Evolution is the peer reviewed journal for rapid dissemination of research in all areas of ecology, evolution and conservation science. The journal gives priority to quality research reports, theoretical or empirical, that develop our understanding of organisms and their diversity, interactions between them, and the natural environment. Ecology and Evolution gives prompt and equal consideration to papers reporting theoretical, experimental, applied and descriptive work in terrestrial and aquatic environments. The journal will consider submissions across taxa in areas including but not limited to micro and macro ecological and evolutionary processes, characteristics of and interactions between individuals, populations, communities and the environment, physiological responses to environmental change, population genetics and phylogenetics, relatedness and kin selection, life histories, systematics and taxonomy, conservation genetics, extinction, speciation, adaption, behaviour, biodiversity, species abundance, macroecology, population and ecosystem dynamics, and conservation policy.
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