Daily Press (Sunday)

Scientists link health of whales to stress hormones

- By Patrick Whittle Associated Press

PORTLAND, Maine — Whale researcher­s in New England believe they’ve found a new way to measure the amount of stress felt by whales when they experience traumas such as entangleme­nts in fishing gear, and they say itcould help protect the massive creatures from extinction.

The scientists, with the New England Aquarium in Boston, said the method involves measuring stress hormones by studying baleen, the bristly filterfeed­ing system in the mouths of the biggest whales on the planet. The baleen serves as a record that shows a spike in stress hormones when whales encounter threats such as a changing climate, ship strikes and entangleme­nts, lead author Rosalind Rolland said.

Scientists can use the data to read the stress levels a whale experience­s over the course of many years, somewhat similar to reading the rings on a tree. The data are important because whales experienci­ng more chronic stress are less likely to reproduce, and they can become more susceptibl­e to disease — a bad combinatio­n for population­s that are perilously low.

“A whale responding to any type of stressor; could be interactin­g with a ship. It could be fishing gear. It could be environmen­tal changes that stress the whale out,” Rolland said in a telephone interview. “This shows the stress hormones are related to what was going on with the whale.”

The group published its research online in the journal Marine Mammal Science in March. The scientists reported the appearance of a whale’s baleen reflects the adrenal glands pumping out stress hormones as they fight a life-threatenin­g circumstan­ce. By analyzing the baleen after whales die, scientists can learn about spikes in stress hormones.

The scientists performed their work on a baleen plate from a bowhead whale that had been badly entangled in fishing gear.

The whale was killed off Alaska in 2017 by Inuit hunters who found it dragging fishing gear and appearing lethargic. The baleen showed a spike of stress hormones 20 times greater than normal, according to the aquarium.

The research builds on a body of work that shows stress hormones elevate when whales become entangled in fishing gear, which some scientists estimate kills up to 300,000 whales and dolphins annually.

The aquarium has touted the work as a “significan­t” breakthrou­gh in the way whales’ stress hormones can be studied. The scientists published an earlier pilot paper on the subject in 2014.

The research at the New England Aquarium provides a chilling perspectiv­e on human influences on whale health as well as a new scientific tool to help save them, said Regina Asmutis-Silvia, a biologist with Whale and Dolphin Conservati­on in Plymouth, Massachuse­tts who was not involved in the study.

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