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      Southern Hemisphere humpback whales wintering off Central America: insights from water temperature into the longest mammalian migration.

      Biology letters
      Animal Migration, Animals, Ecosystem, Geography, Humpback Whale, physiology, Pacific Ocean, Temperature, Water Movements

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          Abstract

          We report on a wintering area off the Pacific coast of Central America for humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) migrating from feeding areas off Antarctica. We document seven individuals, including a mother/calf pair, that made this migration (approx. 8300km), the longest movement undertaken by any mammal. Whales were observed as far north as 11 degrees N off Costa Rica, in an area also used by a boreal population during the opposite winter season, resulting in unique spatial overlap between Northern and Southern Hemisphere populations. The occurrence of such a northerly wintering area is coincident with the development of an equatorial tongue of cold water in the eastern South Pacific, a pattern that is repeated in the eastern South Atlantic. A survey of location and water temperature at the wintering areas worldwide indicates that they are found in warm waters (21.1-28.3 degrees C), irrespective of latitude. We contend that while availability of suitable reproductive habitat in the wintering areas is important at the fine scale, water temperature influences whale distribution at the basin scale. Calf development in warm water may lead to larger adult size and increased reproductive success, a strategy that supports the energy conservation hypothesis as a reason for migration.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          10.1098/rsbl.2007.0067
          2390682
          17412669

          Chemistry
          Animal Migration,Animals,Ecosystem,Geography,Humpback Whale,physiology,Pacific Ocean,Temperature,Water Movements

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