By Mindy
Weisberger, Senior Writer | August 4, 2016 12:45pm ET
What
scene could be more tranquil than that of a sea otter mother cradling her
nursing pup? But there's a darker side to this heartwarming tableau. Suckling a
baby comes with a high metabolic cost, one that some female otters' bodies just
can't meet — and the experience can be fatal.
Scientists
knew that mortality rates are unusually high in female southern sea otters that
have just finished lactating, but researchers had yet to pinpoint the cause.
However,
a new study offers the first evidence of what's happening in the bodies of
female otters as they nurse their young, helping scientists to understand how
the animals' metabolisms kick into overdrive to handle the demands of lactation
— and why they sometimes burn out.
"This
had been a big question within the marine mammal scientific community for many
years," said study co-author Nicole Thometz, a postdoctoral researcher
with the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of
California, Santa Cruz.
Thometz
told Live Science in an email that in an earlier study, she and her colleagues
had evaluated the energy demands of sea
otter pups at the Sea Otter Research and Conservation (SORAC) program
at the Monterey Bay Aquarium in California. As the otters grew from pups to
juveniles, the scientists calculated how many calories a female otter would
require to keep up with the youngsters' needs, estimating that she would need
about twice as many as a nonlactating female.
But
Thometz said a crucial piece of the puzzle was missing: metabolic analysis of a lactating
female. Without that critical data, scientists had no way of knowing how a
female otter's body responds to lactation, and whether that challenge might be
even greater than they suspected.
Meanwhile,
the scientists faced a challenge of their own; breeding otters in captivity is
illegal, so the researchers had no way of collecting the missing data. The
unexpected arrival of a pair of young female sea otters, one of whom was
pregnant, at the Monterey Bay Aquarium handed the researchers exactly the
opportunity they needed.
The
two otters were moved to a lab at Santa Cruz, where the researchers used a
special chamber to measure the animals' oxygen intake.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!