Dear MARMAMers:

    My co-authors and I are pleased to announce our recent publication: 
'Blubber gene expression and cortisol concentrations reveal changing 
physiological stress in a Southern ocean sentinel species' published in Marine 
Environmental Research.

Our article is available open access at: 
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106596

Abstract
The health of migratory eastern Australian humpback whales (Megaptera 
novaeangliae) can reflect the condition of their remote polar foraging 
environments. This study used gene expression (LEP, LEPR, ADIQ, AhR, TNF-α, 
HSP-70), blubber hormone concentrations (cortisol, testosterone), and 
photogrammetric body condition to assess this sentinel species during a period 
of unprecedented changes to anthropogenic activity and natural processes. The 
results revealed higher cortisol concentrations in 2020 compared to 2021, 
suggesting a decline in physiological stress between years. Additionally, 
metabolic transcripts LEPR, and AhR, which is also linked to xenobiotic 
metabolism, were upregulated during the 2020 southbound migration. These 
differences suggest that one or more environmental stressors were reduced 
between 2020 and 2021, with upregulated AhR possibly indicating a Southern 
Ocean pollutant declined between the years. This research confirms a Southern 
Ocean-wide decrease in whale stress during the study period and informs efforts 
to identify key stressors on Antarctic marine ecosystems.

kind regards,

Jacob M.J. Linsky, PhD (he/him)
School of the Environment | Moreton Bay Research Station
The University of Queensland
+61 482 795 388

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