Abstract
Epidermal morphology and proliferation were examined in beluga whales during three phases of their annual cycle: spring migration from oceanic wintering grounds, summer occupation of estuaries in Hudson Bay, and return migration in fall. Incursion into relatively warm brackish water was associated with decreased thickness of the stratum externum and sloughing of a superficial layer of degenerative epidermal cells, changes that resulted in the loss of a distinctive yellow hue apparent over the dorsal body surface of whales examined during spring migration. Proliferation rate, determined by incorporation of tritiated thymidine in germinal cells, averaged 13.8–16.6% in all three seasons, but exceeded 20% in 7 of 16 whales examined in the estuaries; similarly high values were not observed during spring migration, and in only one of nine animals sampled in the fall. Average proliferation rate in 13 captive belugas was 14.2–16.6%, two to three times higher than any reported value for other cetaceans or terrestrial mammals. Epidermal turnover time in a single whale studied over a 6-week period was estimated to be 70–75 days, comparable to that in bottlenose dolphins, but indicating a much higher rate of cell migration. In estuaries, elevated temperature and low salinity are presumably responsible for accelerating turnover of superficial cells, and may contribute to elevated proliferation rates by stimulating blood flow to the germinal layer.
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