
A breaching humpback whale.
Photo Credit: Mike Doherty
Scientific Frontline: "At a Glance" Summary: Behavioral Effects of Whaling on Humpback Whales
- Main Discovery: Female humpback whales in Oceania continue to show significant shifts in mate selection patterns 50 years after commercial whaling severely reduced their population size.
- Methodology: Researchers analyzed epigenetic data from 485 male humpback whales during long-term monitoring at a breeding ground in New Caledonia between 2000 and 2018.
- Key Data: The Oceanic humpback population was reduced to fewer than 200 individuals in the 1970s, causing a severe demographic bottleneck.
- Significance: The findings reveal that as the population recovers and ages, females are increasingly selecting older males for breeding, a shift from the immediate post-whaling period when younger males bred more frequently to maintain genetic diversity.
- Future Application: The data emphasizes the necessity for continuous, long-term monitoring of previously exploited marine populations to accurately manage their ongoing recovery and understand shifting behavioral dynamics.
- Branch of Science: Marine Biology, Behavioral Ecology, and Epigenetics.
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