Abstract

Nursing and weaning periods are poorly understood in cetaceans due to the difficulty of assessing underwater behaviour in the wild. However, the onset and completion of weaning are critical turning points for individual development and survival, with implications for a species' life history including reproductive potential. δ15N and δ13C deposited in odontocete teeth annuli provide a lifetime record of diet, offering an opportunity to investigate variation and trends in fundamental biology. While available reproductive parameters for beaked whales have largely been inferred from single records of stranded or hunted animals and extrapolated across species, here we examine the weaning strategy and nursing duration in northern bottlenose whales (Hyperoodon ampullatus) by measuring stable isotopes deposited in dentine growth layer groups (GLGs). Using a collection of H. ampullatus teeth taken from whales killed during the whaling era (N = 48) and from two stranded specimens, we compared ontogenetic variation of δ15N and δ13C found in annual GLGs across all individuals, by sex and by region. We detected age-based trends in both δ15N and δ13C that are consistent across regions and males and females, and indicate that nursing is prolonged and weaning does not conclude until whales are 3-4 years old, substantially later than previous estimates of 1 year. Incorporating a prolonged period of maternal care into H. ampullatus life history significantly reduces their reproductive potential, with broad implications for models of beaked whale life history, energetics and the species' recovery from whaling.

Highlights

  • Maternal investment in mammals varies based on an array of ecological and evolutionary factors resulting in a range of maternal strategies e.g. [1]

  • This study offers a rare opportunity to expand our appreciation of the variation in maternal investment strategies in beaked whales and across cetaceans

  • We found δ15N generally peaked in GLG1 and declined with age

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Summary

Introduction

Maternal investment in mammals varies based on an array of ecological and evolutionary factors resulting in a range of maternal strategies e.g. [1]. Maternal investment in mammals varies based on an array of ecological and evolutionary factors resulting in a range of maternal strategies e.g. Nursing is critical to the survival and fitness of infant mammals; providing our earliest energetic and nutritional requirements, supporting maternal bonding, and initializing ongoing socialization [2,3,4]. Nursing duration and the weaning strategy have implications for infant survival, interbirth interval, and lifetime reproductive output, which are critical measures for understanding the life history, energetics and population dynamics of a species [5]. Prolonged maternal investment and beaked whale reproductive life history

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