Dear colleagues,

My co-authors and I are happy to announce the publication of the following 
paper in the Journal of Experimental Biology:

Glarou, M., Rasmussen, M.H., Poldner, A., Ruppert, S.N.S., Sotiropoulou, D., 
Sadozai, Z., Jarzynowska, M., Iversen, M.R., Sigurðsson, G.M., Halldórsson, 
S.D., Chosson, V., Clapham, P.J., Ivashchenko, Y., Tormosov, D., Christiansen, 
F. (2025). Size-specific strategies of sympatric cetaceans to reduce heat loss. 
Journal of Experimental Biology, 228, jeb249356.

Abstract:

Maintaining a stable core body temperature is essential for endotherms. 
Cetaceans live in a highly thermally conductive medium, requiring special 
adaptations to reduce heat loss and maintain homeothermy. We employed a 
combination of aerial photogrammetry and existing data sources to estimate heat 
loss rates in five sympatric cetaceans of varying sizes, inhabiting the 
sub-arctic waters (~3.7 °C) of NE-Iceland: harbour porpoises (Phocoena 
phocoena, 1.0 - 1.6 m, n = 50), white-beaked dolphins (Lagenorhynchus 
albirostris, 1.1 - 2.9 m, n = 294), minke whales (Balaenoptera acutorostrata, 
4.4 - 8.6 m, n = 30), humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae, 6.0 - 14.2 m, n 
= 282) and blue whales (Balaenoptera musculus, 13.2 - 24.2 m, n = 29). Further, 
we investigated the effect of body size (length), body shape 
(surface-area-to-volume ratio, SVR), body temperature, and blubber thermal 
conductivity and thickness on heat loss for all species. Smaller species had 
higher volume-specific heat loss compared to larger species due to their higher 
SVRs, a fundamental consequence of scaling. Apart from body size, blubber 
thickness had the largest effect on heat loss, followed by thermal 
conductivity. Smaller cetaceans seem to rely primarily on physiological and 
morphological adaptations to reduce heat loss, such as increased blubber 
thickness and lower thermal conductivity, whereas larger species offset heat 
loss by having larger bodies and lower SVRs. Our findings provide valuable 
insights into the thermal biology of these species and its implications for 
habitat use and prey requirements.

The paper can be accessed from the following link:
https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.249356

If you don’t have access, feel free to email me for a copy.


Best regards,



Maria Glarou

PhD Fellow
Húsavík Research Centre
University of Iceland
Hafnarstétt 3, 640 Húsavík

Email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> / 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Instagram: @seagullseyeview<https://www.instagram.com/seagullseyeview/>
Twitter: @mglarou<https://twitter.com/mglarou>
ResearchGate<https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Maria-Glarou> / Google 
Scholar<https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=gVV1c04AAAAJ&hl=en>

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