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Whales Use Distinct Strategies To Counteract Solar Ultraviolet Radiation

Abstract

A current threat to the marine ecosystem is the high level of solar ultraviolet radiation (UV). Large whales have recently been shown to suffer sun-induced skin damage from continuous UV exposure. Genotoxic consequences of such exposure remain unknown for these long-lived marine species, as does their capacity to counteract UV-induced insults. We show that UV exposure induces mitochondrial DNA damage in the skin of seasonally sympatric fin, sperm, and blue whales and that this damage accumulates with age. However, counteractive molecular mechanisms are markedly different between species. For example, sperm whales, a species that remains for long periods at the sea surface, activate genotoxic stress pathways in response to UV exposure whereas the paler blue whale relies on increased pigmentation as the season progresses. Our study also shows that whales can modulate their responses to fluctuating levels of UV, and that different evolutionary constraints may have shaped their response strategies.

Article / Publication Data
Active/Online
YES
Volume
3
Available Metadata
Accepted On
July 23, 2013
DOI ↗
Fiscal Year
Publication Name
Nature
Published On
August 01, 2013
Final Online Publication On
August 01, 2013
Print Volume
3
Print Number
2386
Submitted On
June 04, 2013
URL ↗

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Authors

Authors who have authored or contributed to this publication.

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