A team gathers skin samples from healthy humpback whales in waters off the Western Antarctic Peninsula. Researchers obtain samples by releasing a biopsy-collecting dart, which bounces off the whales’ skin and into the water. The team then retrieves the floating dart and brings it back to a lab for analysis.
A new study by scientists from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), Duke University, and the University of California, Santa Cruz, shows that monitoring whales’ skin microbes could offer a way to assess their health and nutrition over different seasons and environmental circumstances, and also to detect how they are affected by climate change and human-caused impacts on ocean ecosystems.
Learn more:
Video: David W. Johnston, Duke University. The research was authorized by NOAA permit #808-735 and Antarctic Conservation Act permit #2009-14.
2 views
1359
295
1 year ago 00:02:40 1
Sea Unicorn. Arctic. Franz Josef Land. Narwhal Expedition.
1 year ago 00:11:53 1
Dramatic raw footage of NOAA researchers tagging orcas with cross bows (killer whales) in Antarctica
4 years ago 00:01:37 1
A VERY RARE Whale! | Fin/ Blue Whale Hybrid, Santa Barbara, CA.