Dear colleagues,

My co-authors and I are happy to announce the publication of the following 
paper in the Journal of Physiology:

Christiansen, F., Uhart, M.M., Bejder, L., Clapham, P., Ivashchenko, Y., 
Tormosov, D., Lewin, N. & Sironi, M. 2022. Fetal growth, birth size and 
energetic cost of gestation in southern right whales. Journal of Physiology 
https://doi.org/10.1113/JP282351

Abstract:
The cost of reproduction greatly affects a species’ life history strategy. 
Baleen whales exhibit some of the fastest offspring growth rates in the animal 
kingdom. We quantified the energetic cost of gestation for southern right 
whales (Eubalaena australis) by combining whaling catch records of pregnant 
females with photogrammetry data on southern right whale mothers and calves 
from two breeding grounds in Argentina and Australia. The relationship between 
calf birth size and maternal length was determined from repeated measurements 
of individual females before and after giving birth. Fetal growth was 
determined from generalized linear models fitted to fetal length data from 
whaling operations between 1961 and 1967. Fetal length was converted to volume 
and mass, using the volume-to-length relationship of newborn southern right 
whales calves, and published tissue composition and energy content estimates. 
Fetal maintenance costs (heat of gestation) and the energy content of the 
placenta were predicted from published relationships and added to the fetal 
growth cost to calculate the total cost of gestation. Our findings showed that 
fetal growth rates and birth size increased linearly with maternal length, with 
calves being born at ∼35% maternal length. Fetal length increased curvilinearly 
through gestation, which resulted in an exponential increase in fetal volume 
and mass. Consequently, the cost of gestation was very low during the first 
(0.1% of total cost) and second trimester (4.9%), but increased rapidly during 
the last trimester (95.0%). The heat of gestation incurred the highest cost for 
pregnant females (73.8%), followed by fetal growth (21.2%) and the placental 
energy content (5.0%).

The paper is open access and can be accessed from the following link:
https://physoc.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1113/JP282351

The article comes with a graphical abstract from what appears to be a 5-year 
old, and a smug picture of the artist himself. Enjoy!


Best regards,



Fredrik Christiansen
Assistant Professor
Zoophysiology, Department of Biology, Aarhus University
C.F. Møllers Allé 3, 8000 Aarhus C, Denmark
[email protected]
http://scholar.google.com.au/citations?user=vkA5Y3EAAAAJ&hl=en&oi=sra
http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Fredrik_Christiansen3/?ev=hdr_xprf

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