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Abstract Data from Bering‐Chukchi‐Beaufort Seas bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus), harvested during 1973–2021 by aboriginal subsistence hunters, were used to estimate reproductive parameters: length at sexual maturity (LSM), age at sexual maturity (ASM), pregnancy rate (PR), and calving interval. Sexual maturity (N = 187 females) was determined from the presence/absence of corpora in the ovaries, or a fetus. Using sampling bias‐corrected logistic regression, LSM was estimated at 13.5 m, 95% CI [13.0, 13.8]. There was a downward trend in LSM over time, statistically significant with one method but marginal with another. A growth model translated this estimate to an ASM estimate of 23.5 years, 95% CI [20.4, 26.7]. Pregnancy rate was determined from mature females (N = 125), and from a subset limited to certain autumn‐caught whales (n = 37) to reduce bias. The PR was estimated at 0.46 globally, 95% CI [0.36, 0.55] and 0.38 for the autumn sample, 95% CI [0.20, 0.51]. Both estimated PRs are consistent with a 3‐year calving interval, because the larger estimate includes two cohorts of pregnant whales harvested in spring, and bowhead whale gestation is longer than 12 months. These analyses represent the most conclusive empirical estimates of ASM, LSM, and PR for this bowhead whale stock from the largest available data sets to date.more » « less
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Eufemio, Rosemary J.; de Almeida Ribeiro, Ingrid; Sformo, Todd L.; Laursen, Gary A.; Molinero, Valeria; Fröhlich-Nowoisky, Janine; Bonn, Mischa; Meister, Konrad (, Biogeosciences)Abstract. Forty years ago, lichens were identified as extraordinary biological icenucleators (INs) that enable ice formation at temperatures close to0 ∘C. By employing INs, lichens thrive in freezing environmentsthat surpass the physiological limits of other vegetation, thus making themthe majority of vegetative biomass in northern ecosystems. Aerosolizedlichen INs might further impact cloud glaciation and have the potential toalter atmospheric processes in a warming Arctic. Despite the ecologicalimportance and formidable ice nucleation activities, the abundance,diversity, sources, and role of ice nucleation in lichens remain poorlyunderstood. Here, we investigate the ice nucleation capabilities of lichenscollected from various ecosystems across Alaska. We find ice nucleatingactivity in lichen to be widespread, particularly in the coastal rainforestof southeast Alaska. Across 29 investigated lichen, all species show icenucleation temperatures above −15 ∘C, and ∼30 %initiate freezing at temperatures above −6 ∘C. Concentrationseries of lichen ice nucleation assays in combination with statisticalanalysis reveal that the lichens contain two subpopulations of INs, similarto previous observations in bacteria. However, unlike the bacterial INs, thelichen INs appear as independent subpopulations resistant to freeze–thawcycles and against temperature treatment. The ubiquity and high stability ofthe lichen INs suggest that they can impact local atmospheric processes andthat ice nucleation activity is an essential trait for their survival incold environments.more » « less