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Results tagged “whales” from NatGeo News Watch

New pictures of boneworms

Posted on November 11, 2009 | 0 Comments

By James G. Robertson

The Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute has new pictures of the worms we wrote about in September, and the number of species identified by scientists has increased from nine to as many as 17.

The researchers have also published some insight into how the worms get food from the bones of dead animals, and how the worms reproduce.  But how they find their food is still a mystery, and will be an area of future research.

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Photo: Female bone worm. Image credit: © 2008 Greg Rouse

The worms grow complex root systems into the bones they find on the seafloor, and bacteria within the roots digest proteins and lipids to feed the worms.  The feathery "palps" that wave around in the water are used to get oxygen.  Although we previously reported they only eat whale bones, the researchers have found the worms will also feed from cow bones.

Even more bizarre than their choice of food is the worms' life cycle.  Each worm starts as a microscopic larva, and develops once it finds a bone to land on.  The larvae that colonize the bones all develop into females, while some of the microscopic larvae that don't land never grow and develop into males.  The microscopic males land on the females' "palps," make their way to the females' body tube, and fertilize thousands of eggs, which starts the process over again.

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Photo: A microscopic female boneworm.  Image credit: © 2009 Greg Rouse

You can watch a video of the bone worms in the wild, narrated by Robert Vrijenhoek, one of the researchers, below:

All images and video courtesy of the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.

Skin and tissue samples from more than 1,500 humpback whales have provided new insights into how different breeding populations of the whales interact with one another in the Southern Hemisphere.

"After 15 years of research in the waters of the South Atlantic and Indian Oceans, scientists from the Wildlife Conservation Society, the American Museum of Natural History, and an international coalition of organizations have unveiled the largest genetic study of humpback whale populations ever conducted in the Southern Hemisphere," the Wildlife Conservation Society said yesterday.

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Humpback whales in southern populations are poorly understand in terms of their population structure. The new research will help researchers understand these populations and how they are connected, which in turn will help inform management decisions.

Credit: M. Leslie

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"By analyzing DNA samples from more than 1,500 whales, researchers can now peer into the population dynamics and relatedness of Southern Hemisphere humpback whales as never before, and help inform management decisions in the sometimes politically charged realm of whale conservation," the New York-based conservation charity added.

So little is known about southern ocean basin humpbacks that researchers initially used old whaling records for insights into whale population boundaries.

"Humpback whales are perhaps the most studied species of great whale in the Northern Hemisphere, but many of the interactions among Southern Hemisphere populations are still poorly understood," said Howard Rosenbaum, Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Ocean Giants Program and lead author of the study. "This research illustrates the vast potential of genetic analyses to uncover the mysteries of how humpbacks travel and form populations in the southern ocean basins."

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The scientists used biopsy darts to harmlessly collect bits of skin (and the genetic material needed for the study) from the whales. The small darts bounce off the backs of surfacing whales and then float, enabling the researchers to recover them.

Credit: T. Collins

Researchers collected skin samples from 1,527 whales from 14 sampling sites from the southwestern and southeastern Atlantic Ocean, and the southwestern and northern Indian Oceans.

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The populations are known as Breeding Stocks A (Southwest Atlantic Ocean), B (Southeast Atlantic Ocean), C (Southwest Indian Ocean), and X (Northern Indian Ocean), based on information amassed and designated by the International Whaling Commission, including data from 19th and 20th Centuries commercial whaling.

"The scientists collected samples from living whales with biopsy darts fired from crossbows," WCS said. "The darts harmlessly bounce off the marine mammals as they surface to breathe. Samples came also from skin which is continually sloughed off by the animals and collected by the research teams."

The samples were analyzed by the AMNH Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, which focused on mitochondrial DNA, which is passed through maternal lines of a population, in order to measure interchange between groups.

The findings revealed:

  • The highest rate of gene flow between populations is between whales that breed on either side of the African continent (Breeding Stocks B and C), with an estimated one or two reproductively active whales every year swimming from one ocean to join whales in another breeding ground. Authors of the current study previously identified the same individual whale in both Atlantic and Indian Ocean breeding grounds at different times, the first recorded instance of a humpback whale traveling between these two oceans.
  • A lower rate of gene flow between humpbacks breeding on opposite sides of the Atlantic (one population along coastal Brazil and the other along the coast of Southern Africa). While no individual whales have been detected traveling across the Southern Atlantic to both breeding grounds, genetic similarities reveal a slight degree of populations interacting. "Interestingly, an examination of humpback whale songs between the two populations are similar, another hint at interchange between the two groups, most likely in the whales' feeding grounds in Antarctic waters," WCS said.
  • Breeding Stock X, which inhabits the northern Indian Ocean off the Arabian Peninsula, numbers fewer than 200 whales and is the most distinct in terms of genetics and migratory behavior. Unlike the other humpback populations, it is non-migratory and only distantly related to the nearest group of humpbacks (which breed off Madagascar and the eastern coast of Southern Africa). As a small, insular group, the "X" population is unique and therefore a conservation priority.

"In addition to examining the population boundaries of humpbacks in the Southern Hemisphere, the study also gives scientists some insight into the mysterious and mercurial nature of marine ecosystems, with currents, water depth, and other unseen factors serving as shifting conduits and barriers between marine populations and ecosystems," WCS added.

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Researchers from the Wildlife Conservation Society, the American Museum of Natural History, and other organizations have conducted the largest genetic study ever on humpback whales in the Southern Hemisphere. Here, crew members observe several humpbacks off the coast of Madagascar, one of 14 study sites in the south Atlantic and Indian Oceans.

Credit: Julie Larsen Maher (c) WCS

"Understanding the needs of humpbacks and other whale species can be challenging in terms of direct observations of these animals in the wild," Rosenbaum said. "Molecular technology gives us a window into the lives of whales that can help us understand the ecological forces shaping their movements and distribution. We can also use our findings to inform management decisions for a species that is only now beginning to recover from centuries of commercial whaling."

The humpback whale is a baleen whale that grows up to approximately 50 feet in length. The species has distinctively long pectoral fins and a head with knobs on the top and lower jaw.

"The humpback is also known for its acrobatics (such as full body breaching) and haunting songs, typically sung by males and possibly a mating behavior," WCS said. "The slow-swimming species was hunted commercially until the International Whaling Commission protected the species globally in 1966. Current estimates for humpback whale numbers are widely debated. While they are recovering, total population sizes may only perhaps be a small percent of the original global population."

The research was published in PLoS One, an interactive open-access journal for scientific and medical research. Other contributors to the study include: Columbia University; University of Pretoria; Environment Study of Oman; Instituto Baleia Jubarta and PURCS (Brazil); University of Cape Town; Marine and Coastal Management (South Africa); Faculdade de Biociências; Agence Nationale des Parcs Nationaux (Gabon); Association Megaptera (France); Université de La Rochelle (France).

By James G. Robertson, National Geographic Digital Media

Imagine having to wait for a whale to drop from the sky before you could eat.

At least nine new species of bristleworms that have adapted to feed from the unpredictable food source of dead whales have been discovered by Swedish scientists, according to a release from the University of Gothenburg.

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Photo of submerged whale remains: Craig R Smith, courtesy University of Gothenburg, Sweden

The researchers say that some of these previously-undiscovered species are so highly specialized they would have trouble surviving anywhere else. For example, the Osedax worm uses a root system to burrow into the bones and search for food there. Others eat the bacteria that congregate on the surface of the bones.

One whale cadaver "offers the same amount of nutrients that normally sinks from the surface to the seafloor in 2,000 years."

"A dead whale is an enormous source of nutrients," the University of Gothenburg says in its statement. "In fact, one cadaver offers the same amount of nutrients that normally sinks from the surface to the seafloor in 2,000 years, and this is of great benefit to innumerable species: First the meat is eaten by for example sharks and hagfish, then tremendous amounts of various organisms come to feast on the skeleton."

Researchers discovered the new worms, which are related to the earthworm, by placing underwater cameras near whale carcasses they planted on the seafloor 125 meters (410 feet) deep off the coasts of Sweden and California. They retrieved samples and compared the DNA of the worms, and made another discovery: although some worms looked similar, their DNA varied widely.

The difference in DNA suggests that the highly-specialized worms developed from different ancestors and at different times, say the researchers.

Combined with the worms' similar appearances, the DNA also suggests that there may be other wide-ranging species of undersea animals that look similar but in fact are separate species, perhaps making the ocean a more diverse place than previously thought.

You might also like:

worms-thumb-picture.jpgWorms and Superworms: More Than Fish Food
To some people the earthworm is nothing more than fish bait. But the more we study them the more we find how diverse and complex earthworms are. And they may be doing a lot more for us than we know.

Are pollutants causing a surge in cancers in wildlife, threatening the conservation and even survival of some species? And is their fate a flashing light for the health of humans?"

GreenTurtleFace-picture.jpg"Cancer is one of the leading health concerns for humans, accounting for more than 10 percent of human deaths," said Denise McAloose, chief pathologist for the Wildlife Conservation Society's Global Health Program.

"But we now understand that cancer can kill wild animals at similar rates."

 

Green turtles are one of several marine species that suffer from high levels of cancer in the wild.

Photo by Sharon Deem

McAloose is the lead author of an article published in the July issue the journal Nature Reviews Cancer, which makes the point that some wild animal species suffer from cancer at the same rates that humans and some species serve as early-warning sentinels for animal and human health.

Many species living within polluted aquatic environments suffer high rates of cancerous tumors, and studies strongly suggest links between wildlife cancers and human pollutants, says the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society, in a statement about the research.

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For example, the study cites the case of beluga whales in North America's St. Lawrence River system.

"These whales have an extraordinarily high rate of intestinal cancer, which is their second leading cause of death.

"One type of pollutant in these waters--polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (or PAHs)--is a well-known carcinogen in humans, and PAHs are suspected carcinogens for beluga whales as well."

A beluga whale in New York Aquarium. Wild belugas in the nearby St. Lawrence River system suffer from intestinal cancer.

NGS photo by Winfield Parks

Fish in other industrialized waterways, including brown bullhead catfish and English sole, also exhibit high levels of cancer.

Virus-induced cancers can affect the ability of some wildlife populations to reproduce.

"Genital tumors in California sea lions on North America's western coast occur at much higher rates than previously documented. Oceanic dolphin species, such as the dusky dolphin and Burmeister's porpoise (both found in the coastal waters of South America), are also showing higher rates of genital carcinomas."

Other virus-induced cancers can affect the feeding ability or eyesight of wildlife.

"Green sea turtles--a migratory species in oceans across the globe--suffer from fibropapillomatosis, a disease that causes skin and internal organ tumors. A virus is suspected as the cause these tumors, and environmental factors such as human-manufactured carcinogens might exacerbate their severity or prevalence."

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Green turtle with a tumor.

Photo by Cynthia Lagueux

In certain situations, cancer threatens the survival of entire species.

"The Tasmanian devil, the world's largest carnivorous marsupial, is at risk of extinction due to a cancer known as devil facial tumor disease. This form of contagious cancer spreads between individual Tasmanian devils through direct contact (primarily fighting and biting).

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"To save the species from this fatal disease, conservationists are relocating cancer-free Tasmanian devils to geographically isolated areas or zoos."

The authors highlight the critical need to protect both animals and people through increased health monitoring.

"Monitoring the health of wildlife can illuminate the causes of cancer in animal populations; thereby, better safeguarding animals and humans against possible disease.

"Evaluating cancer threats in wildlife populations requires the collaborative efforts of biologists, veterinarians, and pathologists as well as the earnest engagement of governments and international agencies."

The paper concludes that more resources are necessary to support wildlife health monitoring.

"Examining the impact of cancer in wildlife, in particular those instances when human activities are identified as the cause, can contribute to more effective conservation and fits within the One World-One Health approach of reducing threats to both human and animal health," said William Karesh, vice president and director of WCS's Global Health Program.

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Beluga whales in the Cook Inlet in Alaska have been listed as an endangered species, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced today.

"In spite of protections already in place, Cook Inlet beluga whales are not recovering," said James Balsiger, acting assistant administrator for NOAA's Fisheries Service.

Photo courtesy NOAA

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Marine life artist Wyland brought his 100th and final "Whaling Wall" mural to Washington, D.C., this week. It formed part of the festivities to celebrate the opening of the new ocean hall at the National Museum of Natural History.

Wyland created the "Hands Across the Oceans" mural on 54 giant canvasses in Beijing for the 2008 Olympic Cultural Festival and the Green Olympics.

Images above and below of Wyland making earlier monumental Whaling Walls courtesy of the Wyland Foundation 

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"This is an exciting time for New Yorkers. Just think, just miles from the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building, Carnegie Hall and Times Square, the great whales are singing," says Christopher W. Clark, director of the Bioacoustics Research Program at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

"These are some of the largest and rarest animals on this planet trying to make a living just a few miles from New York's shores," he said in a statement released today. "It just goes to show us that there are many important and wonderful discoveries to be made about the living world right here, right in our backyards."

 

Photo of North Atlantic right whale and calf courtesy NOAA

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