Dear colleagues,

On behalf of my coauthors, I'm pleased to announce our new open-access 
publication:

Groß, J., Franco-Santos, R.M., Virtue, P., Nichols, P.D., Totterdell, J., 
Marcondes, M.C.C., Garrigue, C., Botero-Acosta, N., Christiansen, F., 
Castrillon, J., Caballero, S.J., Friedlaender, A.S., Kawaguchi, S., Double, 
M.C., Bell, E.M., Makabe, R., Moteki, M., Hoem, N., Fry, B., Burford, M., 
Bengtson Nash, S., 2024. No distinct local cuisines among humpback whales: A 
population diet comparison in the Southern Hemisphere. Science of The Total 
Environment 931, 172939. 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.172939<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969724030869?via=ihub>


The article can be downloaded 
HERE<https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969724030869?via=ihub>.


Highlighted Findings

  *   Different Southern hemisphere humpback whale populations have distinct 
fatty acid and stable isotope profiles
  *   All tested humpback whales are secondary heterotrophs following an 
omnivorous diet with a diatom origin
  *   Each tested humpback whale population follows a high-fidelity Antarctic 
krill diet
  *   All tested humpback whale populations feed in biologically productive 
areas


Abstract
Southern hemisphere humpback whale (Megaptera novaeangliae, SHHW) breeding 
populations follow a high-fidelity Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) diet 
while feeding in distinct sectors of the Southern Ocean. Their capital breeding 
life history requires predictable ecosystem productivity to fuel migration and 
migration-related behaviours. It is therefore postulated that populations 
feeding in areas subject to the strongest climate change impacts are more 
likely to show the first signs of a departure from a high-fidelity krill diet. 
We tested this hypothesis by investigating blubber fatty acid profiles and skin 
stable isotopes obtained from five SHHW populations in 2019, and comparing them 
to Antarctic krill stable isotopes sampled in three SHHW feeding areas in the 
Southern Ocean in 2019. Fatty acid profiles and δ13C and δ15N varied 
significantly among all five populations, however, calculated trophic positions 
did not (2.7 to 3.1). Similarly, fatty acid ratios, 16:1ω7c/16:0 and 
20:5ω3/22:6ω3 were above 1, showing that whales from all five populations are 
secondary heterotrophs following an omnivorous diet with a diatom-origin. Thus, 
evidence for a potential departure from a high-fidelity Antarctic krill diet 
was not seen in any population. δ13C of all populations were similar to δ13C of 
krill sampled in productive upwelling areas or the marginal sea-ice zone. 
Consistency in trophic position and diet origin but significant fatty acid and 
stable isotope differences demonstrate that the observed variability arises at 
lower trophic levels. Our results indicate that, at present, there is no 
evidence of a divergence from a high-fidelity krill diet. Nevertheless, the 
characteristic isotopic signal of whales feeding in productive upwelling areas, 
or in the marginal sea-ice zone, implies that future cryosphere reductions 
could impact their feeding ecology.


Feel free to email me with any questions you might have.

Cheers,
Jasmin

— —
Dr Jasmin Groß (she/her) #CallMeByMyFirstName
Postdoctoral Research Fellow

Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity | Ammerländer Heerstraße 
231, 26129 Oldenburg, Germany

I Fulbright Alumna I SOPOPP Alumna |

Email: jasmin.gr...@hifmb.de<mailto:jasmin.gr...@hifmb.de>
Phone: +49 (0)471 4831 2519
X: @jasmin4689<https://twitter.com/jasmin4689>
Google Scholar: Dr Jasmin 
Groß<https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?user=UGOcQRcAAAAJ&hl=en>





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