Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I have recently published the following paper in Endangered 
Species Research:

Fecal glucocorticoids and anthropogenic injury and mortality in North Atlantic 
right whales Eubalaena glacialis
Rosalind M. Rolland, William A. McLellan, Michael J. Moore, Craig A. Harms, 
Elizabeth A. Burgess, Kathleen E. Hunt

ABSTRACT: As human impacts on marine ecosystems escalate, there is increasing 
interest in quantifying sub-lethal physiological and pathological responses of 
marine mammals. Glucocorticoid hormones are commonly used to assess stress 
responses to anthropogenic factors in wildlife. While obtaining blood samples 
to measure circulating hormones is not currently feasible for free-swimming 
large whales, immunoassay of fecal glucocorticoid metabolites (fGCs) has been 
validated for North Atlantic right whales Eubalaena glacialis (NARW). Using a 
general linear model,
we compared fGC concentrations in right whales chronically entangled in fishing 
gear (n = 6) or live-stranded (n = 1), with right whales quickly killed by 
vessels (n = 5) and healthy right whales (n = 113) to characterize fGC 
responses to acute vs. chronic stressors. fGCs in entangled whales (mean ± SE: 
1856.4 ± 1644.9 ng g−1) and the stranded whale (5740.7 ng g−1) were 
significantly higher than in whales killed by vessels (46.2 ± 19.2 ng g−1) and 
healthy whales (51.7 ± 8.7 ng g−1). Paired feces and serum collected from the 
live-stranded right whale provided comparison of fGCs
in 2 matrices in a chronically stressed whale. Serum cortisol and 
corticosterone in this whale (50.0 and 29.0 ng ml−1, respectively) were much 
higher than values reported in other cetaceans, in concordance with extremely 
elevated fGCs. Meaningful patterns in fGC concentration related to acute vs. 
chronic impacts persisted despite potential for bacterial degradation of 
hormone metabolites in dead whales. These results provide biological validation 
for using fGCs as a biomarker of chronic stress in NARWs.


This paper is open access and is available here:

http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/esr/v34/p417-429/


Rosalind M. Rolland D.V.M.
Senior Scientist
Anderson-Cabot Center for Ocean Life
New England Aquarium
Central Wharf
Boston, MA 02110
617-973-6587
rroll...@neaq.org<mailto:rroll...@neaq.org>

Research Faculty
School for the Environment
University of Massachusetts-Boston

http://www.andersoncabotcenterforoceanlife.org/catalysts-for-change/marine-mammals/

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