4.6 Article

Body Condition and Allometry of Free-Ranging Short-Finned Pilot Whales in the North Atlantic

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 14, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su142214787

Keywords

morphometrics; unmanned aerial vehicles; unmanned aerial systems; aerial photogrammetry; Globicephala macrorhynchus; odontocete

Funding

  1. Agustin de Betancourt Fellowship 2018
  2. Spanish Foundation for Science and Technology [FCT-19-1441]
  3. Canary Agency for Research, Innovation and Information Society [ProID2021010029]
  4. Gobierno de Canarias grant [EIS-2020-07]
  5. Danish Council for Independent Research FNU fellowship

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This study examined the body shape, allometric relationships, and body condition of short-finned pilot whales in the North Atlantic. The researchers used unmanned aerial vehicles to measure the body length, width, and height of the whales. They found that there was no difference in body condition among reproductive classes or locations.
To understand the effects of anthropogenic disturbance on the nutritional health of animals, it is important to measure and understand the morphometrics, allometrics, and body condition of the species. We examined the body shape, allometric relationships, and body condition of short-finned pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus) in three locations across the North Atlantic. Using unmanned aerial vehicles, the body length (BL) and width (along the body axis) were measured from photographs of the dorsal side, while body height (dorso-ventral distance) was measured on the lateral side. Seventy-seven pilot whales were measured (mean +/- SD), including 9 calves (BL 2.37 m +/- 0.118), 31 juveniles (2.90 m +/- 0.183), and 37 adults (3.72 m +/- 0.440). The body shape was similar among reproductive classes, with the widest point being anterior of the dorsal fin (at 30-35% BL from the rostrum). The cross-sectional body shape of the whales was flattened in the lateral plane, which increased towards the peduncle and fluke. The rostrum-blowhole distance and fluke width increased linearly with BL. The estimated volumes of pilot whales ranged between 0.15 and 0.32 m(3) for calves, 0.25 and 0.64 m(3) for juveniles, and 0.46 and 1.13 m(3) for adults. The body condition (residual of log-volume vs. log-length) ranged from -34.8 to +52.4%. There was no difference in body condition among reproductive classes or locations.

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