Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our new publication:

Eichenberger, F., Carroll, E. L., Garrigue, C., Steel, D. J., Bonneville, C. 
D., Rendell, L., & Garland, E. C. (2025). Patterns of paternity: insights into 
mating competition and gene flow in a recovering population of humpback whales. 
Royal Society Open Science, 12(1). <https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.241424> doi: 
10.1098/rsos.241424<https://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.241424>

Abstract:
Variation in reproductive success is a fundamental prerequisite for sexual 
selection to act upon a trait. Assessing such variation is crucial in 
understanding a species’ mating system and offers insights into population 
growth. Parentage analyses in cetaceans are rare, and the underlying forces of 
sexual selection acting on their mating behaviours remain poorly understood. 
Here, we combined 25 years of photo-identification and genetic data to assess 
patterns of male reproductive success and reproductive autonomy of the New 
Caledonian (Oceania, South Pacific) humpback whale breeding population. 
Paternity analysis of 177 mother–offspring pairs and 936 males revealed low 
variation in male reproductive success (average 1.17 offspring per father) 
relative to other polygynous species. The observed skew in success was higher 
than expected under random mating and skewed overall towards males (93%) 
without evidence of paternity over the study period. Finally, an updated male 
gametic mark-recapture abundance estimate of 2084 (95% confidence interval = 
1761–2407, 1995–2019) fell between previous census estimates of the New 
Caledonian population and the wider Oceanian metapopulation. Our results 
provide critical insights into the mating competition of male humpback whales 
and population dynamics across Oceanian populations, two important factors 
affecting the slow recovery from whaling across the South Pacific region.

The paper is open access: 
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.241424

Kind regards,

Franca Eichenberger

--

Franca Eichenberger, PhD

Postdoctoral Scholar, Cetacean Conservation and Genomics Laboratory

Marine Mammal Institute, Hatfield Marine Science Center

Oregon State University

Current time zone: Pacific Standard Time

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