Hello MARMAM Members,

On behalf of my colleagues and myself, I am excited to share with you all our 
new research article: “Steroid hormones in Pacific walrus bones collected over 
three millennia indicate physiological responses to changes in estimated 
population size and the environment”, now available in Conservation Physiology. 
The article is Open Access and can be found here<http://bit.ly/39taanC>.

Charapata P, Horstmann L, Misarti N (2021) Steroid hormones in Pacific walrus 
bones collected over three millennia indicate physiological responses to 
changes in estimated population size and the environment. ConservPhysiol 9(1): 
coaa135; doi:10.1093/conphys/coaa135.

Abstract

The Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) is an iconic Arctic marine 
mammal and an important resource to many Alaska Natives. A decrease in sea ice 
habitat and unknown population numbers has led to concern of the long-term 
future health of the walrus population. There is currently no clear 
understanding of how walrus physiology might be affected by a changing Arctic 
ecosystem. In this study, steroid hormone concentrations (progesterone, 
testosterone, cortisol and estradiol) were analysed in walrus bones collected 
during archaeological [3585–200 calendar years before present (BP)], historical 
[1880–2006 common era (CE)] and modern (2014–2016 CE) time periods, 
representing ~ 3651 years, to track changes in reproductive activity and 
cortisol concentrations (biomarker of stress) over time. Our results show that 
modern walrus samples have similar cortisol concentrations (median = 43.97 ± 
standard deviation 904.38 ng/g lipid) to archaeological walruses (38.94 ± 
296.17 ng/g lipid, P = 0.75). Cortisol concentrations were weakly correlated 
with a 15-year average September Chukchi Sea ice cover (P = 0.002, 0.02, r2 = 
0.09, 0.04, for females and males, respectively), indicating a possible 
physiological resiliency to sea ice recession in the Arctic. All steroid 
hormones had significant negative correlations with mean walrus population 
estimates from 1960 to 2016 (P < 0.001). Progesterone in females and 
testosterone in males exhibited significant correlations with average September 
Chukchi Sea ice cover for years 1880–2016 (P < 0.001 for both, r2 = 0.34, 0.22, 
respectively). Modern walruses had significantly lower (P = < 0.001) 
reproductive hormone concentrations compared with historic walruses during 
times of rapid population increase, indicative of a population possibly at 
carrying capacity. This is the first study to apply bone as a tool to monitor 
long-term changes in hormones that may be associated with changes in walrus 
population size and sea ice cover.

Please email me 
(patrick_charapa...@baylor.edu<mailto:patrick_charapa...@baylor.edu>) if you 
have any questions or are interested in the manuscript. If for any reason you 
do not have access to the article through the link, I would be happy to provide 
a PDF of the manuscript upon request.

Cheers,

Patrick Charapata
PhD Candidate, Baylor University
patrick_charapa...@baylor.edu<mailto:patrick_charapa...@baylor.edu>

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