Beluga whales switch mates to preserve genetic diversity

A long-term DNA study of beluga whales in Alaska has revealed that both males and females regularly change mating partners over their lifetimes.

Researchers analyzed genetic samples from 623 belugas in Bristol Bay over 13 years. The findings show that when calves share siblings, they usually have only one parent in common. Dr. Greg O'Corry-Crowe of Florida Atlantic University led the study. He noted that the population of about 2,000 whales maintains high genetic diversity despite its small size. Frequent mate switching limits the number of highly related offspring in the population, O'Corry-Crowe said. The research was published in Frontiers in Marine Science. The team included scientists from Florida Atlantic University, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, and local subsistence hunters.

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Researchers have documented sperm whales colliding head-on with their heads for the first time using drone footage from the Azores and Balearic islands. The behavior, observed among sub-adult whales, supports longstanding sailor accounts of aggressive whale encounters. The findings were published on March 23 in Marine Mammal Science.

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Scientists have confirmed that a humpback whale traveled at least 15,100 kilometers between breeding grounds in Brazil and Australia, marking the longest known journey for any individual of the species.

Scientists have used genetic analysis of historic specimens to determine that the crocodiles once found in the Seychelles were not a unique species but an isolated population of saltwater crocodiles. The reptiles likely reached the remote islands after drifting across the Indian Ocean. The population was wiped out within decades of permanent human settlement in 1770.

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DNA extracted from preserved Arctic ground squirrel droppings has uncovered details of a diverse ice-age ecosystem in the Yukon region dating back hundreds of thousands of years.

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