Research from The University of Western Australia has found some southern right whale calves are little “milk thieves”.
Adjunct Research Fellow Dr Kate Sprogis, from UWA’s Oceans Institute and School of Biological Sciences, and Dr Fredrik Christiansen, from Aarhus University in Denmark, were co-authors of the study published in .
Dr Sprogis said allosuckling was when a baby suckled from another mother, which wasn’t its own biological mother.
“Allosuckling has been observed in seals and land mammals, including deer, reindeer and giraffe, but not quantified in large whales,” Dr Sprogis said.
“The behaviour observed off the south coast of Australia appeared to be a direct and intentional movement from the calf and the non-biological lactating mother was generally evasive.”
Allosuckling has potential benefits for the calf as it may gain extra milk to help it grow in size and strength, but it may be disadvantageous to the non-biological mother as she needs to provide milk to her own offspring.
“Whales have a capital breeding strategy, where during the nursing season the mother does not feed and is not able to replenish her lost energy reserves,” Dr Sprogis said.
“And at the end of the nursing season the lactating mothers need to migrate back to their feeding grounds. For southern right whales, this is a long migration from Australia all the way to sub-Antarctic Islands or to Antarctica where the mothers can refuel their energy by feeding on small invertebrates like copepods and krill.”
Research to understand the behaviour of southern right whales is important as the mammals are listed as endangered under the Australian Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act and their numbers remain below their estimated historical abundance and range.
Dr Sprogis said it was possible allosuckling also occurred in other related whale species, such as the critically endangered North Atlantic right whale.