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Top Left: Tiny crustaceans, known as cyamids and nicknamed "whale lice".
Top Right: Aerial photograph of two right whales at the Atlantic Ocean offshore
from Argentina.
Bottom: Vicky Rowntree, Jon Seger, Wendy Smith and Zofia "Ada" Kaliszewska.
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September 14, 2005 -
University of Utah biologists studied the genetics of "whale lice" - small
crustaceans that are parasites on endangered "right whales" - and showed the giant
whales split into three species 5 million to 6 million years ago, and that all
three species probably were equally abundant before whaling reduced their numbers.
The five-year study, published in the October 2005 issue of the journal
Molecular Ecology, is the first in which the genes of whale lice were used
to track the genetic evolution of whales. They are not true lice, but instead are
tiny crustaceans -named cyamids. The harmless parasites ride the whales their
entire lives, so their evolution reflects the evolution of the whales.
"These are the original whale riders," says Jon Seger, a University of Utah
biology professor and the study's principal author. "It's a case of the whale
riders telling us what the whales did."
["Whale Rider" was a 2002 Oscar-nominated film about the legend of an ancient
Maori chief who crossed the sea on the backs of whales, and a modern Maori girl in
New Zealand who aspired to become the new chief.]
"Whale researchers have dreamed for years of being able to ride with the whales
and see the world they experience," says study co-author Vicky Rowntree, a
University of Utah research professor of biology and senior scientist at the Ocean
Alliance/Whale Conservation Institute in Lincoln, Mass. "Whale lice have been
doing it for millions of years, and can tell us things about the whales we can't
learn any other way."
By studying certain genes in the whale lice, the researchers showed:
* A single right whale species diverged into three species - North Atlantic,
North Pacific and Southern Ocean right whales - 5 million to 6 million years ago
when movements of Earth's tectonic plates formed the Isthmus of Panama, separating
the Pacific and Atlantic. That set up warm equatorial currents that kept most
blubber-laden right whales from crossing the equator because they could not
tolerate the warm waters.
* One southern right whale crossed the equator 1 million to 2 million years
ago, leaving evidence of the trip when its whale lice bred with those on North
Pacific right whales.
* The highly endangered North Atlantic and North Pacific right whales once may
have been as abundant as southern right whales, suggesting their reduced genetic
diversity is due to whaling in recent centuries, not some longer-term, deadlier
cause. That raises hope for the ultimate recovery of the North Atlantic and North
Pacific species.
Jon and Vicky, who are spouses, conducted the study with Zofia "Ada"
Kaliszewska, who graduated the University of Utah and now is a Harvard University
graduate student; Wendy Smith, a Utah biology graduate student; and 14 co-authors
who collected whale lice or whale genetic material from beached whales around the
world.
How Whale-Riding "Lice" Tell Tales about Whales
Cyamids were nicknamed "whale lice" by early whalers, who often were infested with
real head and body lice. Whale lice are related to crabs and shrimp, and cling to
the whales' raised, callus-like patches of skin - named callosities - the grooves
and pits between callosities, and also to skin in slits that cover mammary glands
and genitals. The white whale lice covering the callosities create distinct
markings that stand out against the whales' dark skin, making it possible for
scientists to distinguish individual whales.
"Their lifestyle is analogous to that of lice in that they live on the skin of the
host and they eat sloughed skin," Jon says. Each whale louse looks vaguely like
a miniature crab, ranges from one-fifth to three-fifths of an inch in length, and
has five pairs of sharp, hooked claws. About 7,500 whale lice live on a single
whale.
Whale lice infest only whales, just as bird lice infest only birds and human lice
infest only people. Recent genetic studies of head and body lice have revealed
details of human evolution. Whale lice hang onto the whales throughout their
lives, so they share a common ecological and evolutionary history with the whales.
Genes from whale lice actually may reveal more about the whales than the whales'
own genes do, because the parasites are much more abundant and reproduce more
often than whales. As a result, the parasites have much greater genetic diversity
and scientists have more mutations to track.
The Utah research focused on genes found in mitochondria - the power plants of
cells - and that mutate at a high rate, acting like a clock to reveal when
evolutionary events happened. The scientists calibrated the clock by comparing
genes from whale lice with related snapping shrimp.
The Utah biologists extracted DNA from whale lice, determined the sequence of the
genetic components in a particular mitochondrial gene, and then built family trees
to show the relationships among whale lice.
The same three whale louse species - Cyamus ovalis, Cyamus gracilis and
Cyamus erraticus - were thought to infest each of the three different
species of right whales. But the new study revealed that like the whales, each
whale louse species also split into three species, so North Pacific, North
Atlantic and Southern Ocean species of right whales each are infested by three
distinct species of cyamid. That tripled - from three to nine - the number of
cyamid species infesting right whales.
The Right Whale - for Extinction?
Right whales - which can reach 60 feet and 70 tons - were named because "they were
the -right' whale to kill, the first whale to be commercially hunted" 1,000 years
ago off Spain; their blubber made their carcasses float for easy recovery,
Vicky says.
Two of the three species of right whales are in danger of extinction. A recent
study estimated only 350 remain in the North Atlantic. Vicky says about 200
survive in the North Pacific, while the Southern Hemisphere population of 8,000 to
10,000 whales is growing 7 percent per year and recovering from whaling.
When whaling began in the Southern Hemisphere in the 1700s, there were an
estimated 40,000 to 150,000 right whales there, Vicky says.
North Atlantic right whales have lower genetic diversity than southern ocean right
whales. But the new study showed "the genetic diversity of whale lice is virtually
as great for the North Atlantic right whale as for the southern right whale,
suggesting that historically (but before whaling) the North Atlantic right whale
population was comparable in size to that in the Southern Hemisphere," Jon says.
"This suggests that the reduced genetic diversity of North Atlantic right whales
happened recently, possibly due to whaling, not because the whale population was
small even before whaling."
Whale louse populations correlate with population sizes of right whales, so if
North Atlantic right whales had small populations before whaling, the diversity of
their whale lice would not be as great as those on the southern right whales.
Limited data from North Pacific whale lice suggest right whales also were abundant
there before whaling began, in line with early whaling records, Vicky says.
Small population size can be harmful because it is impossible to avoid inbreeding
and an increased risk of genetic disease. The study raises hope for endangered
Northern Hemisphere right whales by suggesting that their reduced genetic
diversity is a relatively recent phenomenon and perhaps not as severe overall as
it appears to be in the particular genes that were studied, Jon says.
One Whale Species Became Three as Oceans Separated
Some 20 million years ago, North and South America were separated by deep seas,
but 18 million years ago, undersea volcanism slowly began forming a volcanic
island chain. By 3 million years ago, the chain formed solid land, the Isthmus of
Panama, linking the two continents. By 5 million or 6 million years ago, the sea
between the two continents was so shallow that whales could not swim between the
North Pacific and North Atlantic, Vicky says. Changing circulation patterns
established warm currents that discouraged right whales from moving between
southern and northern oceans.
"Right whales have such thick blubber they can't cross the equator," Vicky
says. "The waters are too warm. They can't shed heat."
Jon says: "The genetics of whale lice show conclusively that the three species
of right whales have been isolated in the North Pacific, North Atlantic and
Southern Hemisphere for about 5 million to 6 million years," with a possible range
of error from 3.6 million to 9.9 million years.
That is consistent with previous studies of the right whales' genes. One limited
study suggested North Atlantic right whales (Eubalaena glacialis) and
southern (Eubalaena australis) right whales became distinct species 3
million to 12 million years ago. A more complete study suggested North Pacific
right whales (Eubalaena japonica) diverged from southern right whales 4.4
million years ago, give or take 2.5 million years.
The new study revealed a fascinating detail. About 1 million to 2 million years
ago, at least one southern right whale - and no more than a few - managed to cross
the equator and join other right whales in the North Pacific. The biologists
reached that conclusion because they found that Cyamus ovalis whale lice in
the North Pacific are much more closely related genetically to southern Cyamus
ovalis than either population is to those in the North Atlantic. Another
species, Cyamus erraticus, does not show such a pattern; those whale lice
in all three oceans are all more distantly related.
The simplest explanation is that a single southern right whale crossed the equator
and mingled with North Pacific right whales. Some of the abundant Cyamus
ovalis whale lice jumped from the southern whale to northern whales, but the
less common Cyamus erraticus, which lives mainly in genital areas, did not.
Despite the barrier posed by warm water, climate has changed over the ages and
"probably there were times when the equatorial waters weren't as hot as they
usually are, and some adventurous juvenile male crossed the equator," Vicky
says.
University of Utah Public Relations
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Salt Lake City, Utah 84112-9017
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