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Can Right Whales Out-Swim Climate Change? Can We?

Andrew J. Pershing, Daniel E. Pendleton

2021Oceanography10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The article by Meyer-Gutbrod and colleagues in this issue demonstrates that the endangered North Atlantic right whale’s preferred prey has declined as the Northwest Atlantic has warmed. Right whales are now spending more time foraging in historically colder habitats, but they are producing fewer calves. The low calf production could reflect a delay between the decline in the potential productivity of their traditional habitats and its increase in their new habitats. This delay would result in a “climate deficit” in their fitness. Right whales must also learn to forage successfully in their new habitats, creating an additional loss of fitness termed an “adaptation deficit.” Humans will also face unavoidable climate deficits, but we have more options for minimizing adaptation deficits.

Topics & Concepts

ForagingEndangered speciesHabitatClimate changeRight whaleForageFisheryProductivityAdaptation (eye)EcologyPredationGeographyWhaleBiologyEconomicsMacroeconomicsNeuroscienceMarine animal studies overviewArctic and Antarctic ice dynamicsOcean Acidification Effects and Responses
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