Dear colleagues,

We are pleased to share our recent open access publication:

Nowak, B.V.R., Lydersen, C., Heide-Jørgensen, M.P., Trites, A.W., and Kovacs, 
K.M. Endangered bowhead whales might buffer climate change with individual 
variability in movement patterns. Sci Rep 16, 6309 (2026). 
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-36908-1

Abstract: Assessing the vulnerability of species to global climate change and 
their capacity for resilience is a central challenge in ecology. Responses are 
variable and difficult to predict but understanding the resilience of 
intrinsically vulnerable species is necessary for management of natural 
populations. Bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus) have recovered from historical 
over-exploitation in several Arctic regions. However, the East 
Greenland-Svalbard-Barents Sea (EGSB) population remains endangered, with 
little known about their habitat use, foraging ecology, or potential 
resilience. We analysed location data from 38 EGSB bowhead whales instrumented 
between 2017 and 2021. We performed home range analyses, fitted a modified 
resource selection function, and estimated move persistence to assess the 
influence of environmental conditions on movement patterns using linear 
mixed-effects modelling. EGSB bowheads used an offshore, deep-water core area 
year-round. Movement patterns showed considerable individual variability and 
suggest this population is not migratory in a classical sense, likely reducing 
intraspecific competition. Depth, low sea surface temperatures, and sea ice 
were all influential on habitat use. Both static and dynamic environmental 
conditions were significantly associated with apparent foraging behaviour. 
Although the habitat use of EGSB bowhead whales is vulnerable to continued 
warming, intrapopulation variability in movements might provide a buffer to 
climate change.

Cheers,
Benia Nowak, on behalf of all co-authors
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