Greetings MARMAM!

Join us on *Thursday, June 16th 4 PM ADT (12 AM PDT / 3 PM EDT / 7 PM GMT
) * for the next SMM Seminar Editors' Select Series: Examining the Eastern
North Atlantic right whale: insights from genetic analysis with Dr. Brenna
Frasier of Saint Mary's University.

Free to attend. Registration required.
Presented online on Zoom.
Register here:
https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_hLrr4SKAQi-wLPXyakLgtA

Space on Zoom is limited to the first 500 attendees. The talk will also be
streamed live on the SMM Facebook page.

*The SMM Seminar Editors' Select Series highlights the latest and most
exciting marine mammal science published in the Marine Mammal Science
Journal. This is your chance to engage with marine mammal scientists, learn
and ask questions from anywhere in the world. All are welcome. *

*About this talk:*
The North Atlantic right whale was once present in both the Western and
Eastern North Atlantic, but has been extirpated from the Eastern North
Atlantic as a result of over a thousand years of whaling activities. It has
not been identified whether the animals that were once present in the
Eastern North Atlantic were a distinct population from the small group of
animals remaining today in the Western North Atlantic. Whaling records
suggest that animals in each of these regions may have had distinct
habitats, and possibly distinct populations, but what does genetic data
suggest? To address this question, we examined the genetic characteristics
of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA from 24 whale bones that range in age from
the 4th to the 20th century from around the North Atlantic. The
interpretation of the results is challenging, especially in a species that
has a long history of commercial whaling. However, all evidence combined
suggests that there was some degree of isolation between whales in each of
these two regions.

*About the presenter:*
Brenna Frasier is trained as a biologist and has studied marine mammals for
almost 25 years. Her research has focused on DNA analysis (primarily
ancient DNA) as a tool to address evolutionary, conservation and species
management questions with a particular interest in examining human use of
whales over the last millennia, whether for commercial or subsistence use.
This has culminated in projects examining 20th century whaling in
Antarctica, 16th century Basque whaling of right and bowhead whales along
the coast of Canada, and Norse whale-use over the past 1000 years around
the North Atlantic. While most of her work has focused on marine mammals
such as the North Atlantic right whale, beluga whale and Maritimes walrus,
she has also studied a variety of other animals, including the Sable Island
horses and several bat species.
Brenna has a passion for facilitating science and natural history learning
and communicating science in unique and natural environments which has led
to an array of other outreach-based projects including the development of
marine mammal and forensic science camps for teens, supporting a local
Forest School, writing for an array of audiences and completing field
guides to assist in Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) studies on
marine mammals in the Canadian Arctic. She is currently the Curator of
Zoology of the Nova Scotia Museum, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

Best regards,

*Ayça Eleman, Ph.D. Candidate*
*Theresa-Anne Tatom-Naecker, Ph.D. Student*
*Eric Angel Ramos, Ph.D.*
*Student Members-at-Large*
Society for Marine Mammalogy
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