Dear colleagues,

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

Christiansen, F., Sironi, M., Lewin, N., Marón, C.F. & Uhart, M.M. 2026. 
Influence of water temperature, body size, condition, and gull-inflicted 
lesions on heat loss in southern right whales in Península Valdés, Argentina. 
Journal of Experimental Biology 229: jeb250925.

Abstract:
Southern right whales (Eubalaena australis; SRWs) are well adapted to cold 
waters because of their large body size and thick blubber. Each year, they 
migrate from high-latitude feeding grounds to warmer breeding grounds where 
they give birth. To assess thermal benefits of this migration, we modelled the 
effects of body size, condition and water temperature on heat loss. Using 
unmanned aerial vehicle photogrammetry at the Península Valdés calving ground 
in Argentina, we measured body length, volume, condition and surface area of 
living SRWs. Blubber thickness was predicted from a blubber-mass model and 
validated using necropsy/catch data. Sensible heat loss was estimated using a 
model incorporating blubber thermal conductivity and body temperature, whereas 
respiratory heat loss was based on respiration rate and tidal volume models. We 
compared heat loss in Península Valdés with that in South Georgia/Georgia del 
Sur (SG/GS), a key feeding ground. Body size had a strong positive effect on 
both heat loss values, but mass-specific loss decreased as 
surface-area-to-volume ratio declined. Increased body condition reduced 
sensible heat loss. Migration from SG/GS to Península Valdés reduced calf heat 
loss by 26% during early lactation. However, total heat loss remained low 
relative to field metabolic rate (FMR), indicating limited thermoenergetic 
benefit from migration. Only at poor body condition (<−0.35) did heat loss 
exceed FMR, threatening survival. Notably, gull-inflicted lesions significantly 
increased heat loss in small and poorly conditioned calves, but had no effect 
on larger or better-conditioned calves. These findings highlight body condition 
as a key regulator of heat loss in baleen whales.

The paper is available at the following link:
https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/229/1/jeb250925/370316/Influence-of-water-temperature-body-size-condition

Best regards,

Fredrik Christiansen
Senior Researcher
Marine Mammal Research, Department of Ecoscience, Aarhus University
Frederiksborgvej 399, 4000 Roskilde, Denmark
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://scholar.google.com.au/citations?user=vkA5Y3EAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=sra
http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Fredrik_Christiansen3/?ev=hdr_xprf

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