Post-menopausal orca mums may protect their sons from other orcas

Publicly released:
International
Resident Killer whales spyhopping. Copyright: Katie Jones, Center for Whale Research
Resident Killer whales spyhopping. Copyright: Katie Jones, Center for Whale Research

Post-menopausal orca mothers protect their sons from being injured by other orcas, according to UK and US scientists. Female orcas live up to ninety years in the wild, twenty-two years after menopause. Scientists have long wondered why humans and some whales spend a significant portion of their life not reproducing. Previous studies have shown that post-menopause orca mothers share the fish they catch with their families, and this new study shows they also provide social support to their sons by protecting them from injury by other orcas. The team studied orcas on the US Pacific Northwest coast, using photographic records to note scars on the orcas' skin. With no natural predators, these wounds must have been inflicted by other orcas, they say. The team noted that male orcas whose mothers were still alive but no longer reproducing had the fewest scars. It's possible the mothers are acting as mediators, helping their sons avoid conflict, the authors add.

Media release

From: Cell Press

Post-menopause orca mothers protect their sons from being injured by other orcas

Female killer whales live up to ninety years in the wild, and most live an average of twenty-two years after menopause. Scientists have long wondered why humans and some whale species spend a significant portion of their life not reproducing. Previous studies show that, even after having their last calf, killer whale mothers take care of their families by sharing the fish they catch. Now, in a study published on July 20 in the journal Current Biology, researchers note that these mothers can also provide social support to their sons by protecting them from being injured by other orcas.

“The motivation of this project was really to try and understand how these post-reproductive females are helping their offspring,” says first author Charli Grimes, an animal-behavior scientist at the University of Exeter. “Our results highlight a new pathway by which menopause is adaptive in killer whales.”

The research team studied southern resident orcas, a group of orcas that live off the Pacific Northwest coast. These killer whales live in matriarchal social units that consist of a mother, her offspring, and the offspring of her daughters. Although male orcas will outbreed with whales from other pods, both males and females stay in their unit of birth, with their mother, for life.

Using data from the Center for Whale Research’s annual photographic census of the orca population, the researchers looked for evidence of scarring on each catalogued whale’s skin. Killer whales have no natural predators other than humans, so a tooth mark that is able to puncture an orca’s skin was most likely inflicted by another orca.

The study found that, if a given male’s mother was still alive and no longer reproducing, that male would have fewer tooth marks than his motherless peers or his peers with a mother who was still reproducing.

“It was striking to see how directed the social support was,” says senior author Darren Croft (@DarrenPCroft), an animal-behavior scientist at the University of Exeter. “If you have a post-reproductive mother who’s not your mother within the social group, there’s no benefit. It’s not that these females are performing a general policing role. These post-reproductive mothers are targeting the support they are giving to their sons.”

The researchers still can’t say for certain what kinds of social conflicts are leading to tooth marks or how older females are protecting their sons against them. They do note that post-menopause females have the lowest incidence of tooth marks in the entire social unit, suggesting that they do not physically intervene in a conflict. If older orca females play a similar role to that of older women in human societies, they might be acting as mediators, preventing conflict from occurring in the first place. To explore this further, the researchers plan on completing an additional study by using drone footage to observe whale behavior from above.

“It’s possible that with age comes advanced social knowledge. Over time, they might have a better understanding of other social groups,” says Grimes. “Given these close mother-son associations, it could also be that she is present in a situation of conflict so she can signal to her sons to avoid the risky behavior they might be participating in.”

“We’ve got hypotheses, but we need to test them by seeing what’s happening under water when these different groups interact,” says Croft. “We’ve learned so much from this population, but we’ve still got so much to learn from them.”

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research Cell Press, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
Journal/
conference:
Current Biology
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: University of Exeter, UK
Funder: Support for this research was provided by a Natural Environment Research Council grant (NE/S010327/1). S.E. also acknowledges support from a Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellowship. Data collection was supported in the Southern resident population by funding from Earthwatch Institute and NOAA Fisheries.
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.