Dear colleagues,

My co-authors and I are happy to announce the publication of the following 
paper in Ecological Modelling:

Christiansen, F., Dickeson, S. & Sprogis, K.R. 2026. A mechanistic approach to 
understanding birth timing, calf growth, and residency of southern right whale 
mother–calf pairs on their calving ground. Ecological Modelling 514:111500.

Abstract:
Understanding residency patterns provides valuable insights into animal life 
history and is fundamental for establishing protected areas. Southern right 
whales (Eubalaena australis) are migratory capital breeders, with females 
accumulating energy reserves on summer feeding grounds to sustain late 
gestation and early lactation while fasting on winter calving grounds. On these 
oligotrophic calving grounds, mothers must grow their calves to a size suitable 
for migration without depleting their finite energy stores. To better 
understand this trade-off, we developed a mechanistic model to estimate the 
residency duration of mother–calf pairs at Australia’s largest calving 
aggregation. By linking maternal body size and condition to key reproductive 
traits, including birth timing, size at birth, calf growth rate, and departure 
timing, we quantified the effect of maternal phenotype on residency duration. 
Maternal size and condition positively influenced both calf birth size and 
growth rate. Absolute calf size was the primary driver of departure, with pairs 
leaving once the calf reached approximately 8 m in length, which likely 
improves calf locomotor performance and reduces predation risk. Larger, 
better-conditioned mothers could grow their calves more rapidly, enabling 
earlier departure and a shorter residency period. This, in turn, allowed 
mothers to return to feeding grounds sooner and replenish depleted energy 
reserves. Our findings highlight how the early lactation phase in SRWs is 
shaped by the energetic constraints of capital breeding and the demands of 
migration and underscore the importance of maternal traits in determining 
residency duration on calving grounds.

The paper is available at the following link:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0304380026000281

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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