Even better—remote sedative delivery allows:
• Rapid sample retrieval
• Reduced handling impacts on individuals
A big step forward for animal welfare and data quality 🦭✨
Posts by SMRU Ecophysiology Lab
Why does this matter?
The ‘Mossquito’ helps us:
✔ Collect time-critical samples
✔ Capture true physiological baselines
✔ Avoid confounding effects of handling stress
Stress makes a difference too 📈
Circulating cortisol and cortisone were significantly higher in manually collected samples—likely due to disturbance and handling during capture.
What did we find?
Short-term apnoea linked to sedation rapidly altered:
• Venous blood gases
• Lactate
• Bicarbonate
• Acid–base status
Timing really matters when sampling!
Meet the ‘Mossquito’ 🦟
We used it to compare:
• Blood gases
• Clinical chemistry
• Adrenocorticosteroid hormones
…between remotely collected samples and traditional manual sampling.
Paper alert 🚨🚨🚨
We’ve developed a remotely operated device for collecting blood samples and administering sedatives in freely moving seals 🦭
🔗 doi.org/10.1111/2041...
A thread 🧵👇
@seamammalresearch.bsky.social
@uniofstandrews.bsky.social
Our new publication with @strandings.bsky.social & #SMRUsealpred contributors. A first attempt at quantifying grey seal predation of marine mammals and the potential impact on declining harbour seal populatons. Check it out! doi.org/10.1111/1365...
🎉 Exciting to see this paper published using @smruinstrument.bsky.social tags to study diving behaviour and physiology of free divers! Congrats to the authors! 👏🔬📡 @smruecophys.bsky.social @chrismcknight.bsky.social
Read the paper here: www.cell.com/current-biol...
Fascinating new research led by @smruecophys.bsky.social researcher @chrismcknight.bsky.social
New @seamammalresearch.bsky.social & @smruinstrument.bsky.social research out today in @currentbiology.bsky.social, using #NIRS integrated into SMRU phone tags to measure the diving behaviour and physiology of the most incredible human divers - the all-female Haenyeo
www.cell.com/current-biol...
Minke whale snout protruding from the sea surface
🦤🌐🧪
Minke whales feeding in the Jacques Cartier passage over summer are predominantly pregnant females. From 2007–2015 pregnancy rates remain stable despite fluctuating prey availability, suggesting some resilience to environmental change
@smruecophys.bsky.social
@seamammalresearch.bsky.social
New paper in @nature.com led by @patricepottier.bsky.social! We demonstrated global vulnerability of amphibians to warming, threatening 10% of >5,000 species examined. How did we do it? See thread🧵
Paper: www.nature.com/articles/s41...
🐳 UPCOMING BOOK ALERT 🐬
The Evolution of Cetacean Societies
Edited by @darrencroft.bsky.social @andrewfoote.bsky.social @stephanielking.bsky.social and myself
Preorder available now
press.uchicago.edu/ucp/books/bo...
#whale #dolphin #animalbehaviour
We're pleased to share our work at @seamammalresearch.bsky.social, published in @science.org last week, showing that seals perceive circulating oxygen levels to adjust their diving behaviour. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Left: A phylogeny of chordates, flanked by images of a lamprey, a placoderm, a brown shark, a longnose gar and a hawksbill turtle. Agnathans such as lampreys lack synovial joints. The first putative evidence of synovial joints in the fossil record is in early gnathostomes such as the antiarch placoderm fish that lived during the Silurian and Devonian periods. Modern gnathostomes such as cartilaginous fishes (i.e., chondrichthyans such as the brown shark), bony fishes (i.e., osteichthyans such as the longnose gar), and limbed vertebrates (i.e., tetrapods such as the Hawksbill turtle) possess synovial joints in their jaws, fins/limbs, and other locations. All images used are freely available without copyright restrictions. Top right: a typical agnathan joint is shown where glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans are uniformly distributed across the cartilages (blue) that are connected by fibrous tissue (olive). Bottom right: a typical gnathostome synovial joint is shown where surface cartilage has a unique proteoglycan composition from the underlying cartilage and bone, and a fluid-filled cavity separates adjacent skeletal elements.
When did the lubricated joints that allow our skeleton to swivel, rotate and bend evolve? @crumplab.bsky.social explores a new @plosbiology.org paper by @neelimasharma.bsky.social &co that pinpoints their origin to the earliest jawed vertebrates 🧪 Paper: plos.io/3CTC8La Primer: plos.io/4kkhXa6
California Coyotes Spotted Hunting #Seal Pups explorersweb.com/california-c...
Yellow-breasted capuchins use stones as nutcrackers, often inadvertently creating sharp-edged flakes, like those associated with early hominids, in what the authors suggest is a possible mechanism for the emergence of hominin stone tools. In PNAS: www.pnas.org/doi/full/10....
Great new paper from one of our alumni Joanne Morten and Exeter Marine's Dr Lucy Hawkes!
#seabirds #AcademicSky 🦤🦑🧪🌐🌍
New blog post: Seals avoid an operating tidal turbine 🦭
Important implications for developers & regulators, as lower numbers of seals close to the turbine at higher flow speeds during operation decreases the potential for fatal collisions & injuries 📉🌎🧪
🔗 appliedecologistsblog.com/2025/02/06/s...
We wrote a wee blog post detailing the findings of our most recent study @seamammalresearch.bsky.social and why the results are important! Give it a read below ⬇️
Humpback whale songs have statistical patterns in their structure that are remarkably similar to those seen in human language. www.newscientist.com/article/2467...
SO very excited about new paper with @simonkirby.bsky.social and @ellengarland.bsky.social: We used infant-inspired tools to analyze eight years of humpback whale song, finding recurring parts with a Zipfian frequency distribution. www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Andy Whiten and I wrote a @science.org perspective about a cool new study from @inbalarnon.bsky.social @simonkirby.bsky.social @ellengarland.bsky.social et al! They found humpback whale song has language-like statistical structure, using methods inspired by infant language learning 🐋🎶 Links below ⬇️
We uncovered the same statistical structure that is a hallmark of human language in whale song, published today in Science. @inbalarnon.bsky.social @simonkirby.bsky.social @jennyallen13.bsky.social @clairenea.bsky.social @emma-carroll.bsky.social
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
SMRU researchers are appealing for the public to help us understand why UK Harbour seals are in steep decline news.st-andrews.ac.uk/archive/st-a...
Anais Bliault presents the ventilatory adjustments of seals to physiological disturbance
How do you spot a leopard? Listen to its roar🐆
Research led by @jonathan-growcott.bsky.social shows for the first time that leopards have unique roars, meaning individuals can be identified through bioacoustic monitoring, a potentially significant advance in leopard conservation.
A pile of lurid yellow semi-liquid feces from a grey seal (Halichoerus grypus) sits on a wet black rock. The feces are full of white parasitic worms (helminths, probably anisakids). 🪱
Do you work in wildlife health & conservation? We are seeking participants for an online survey of practitioner/researcher attitudes to parasite conservation. Open to all roles and experience levels. DM me for more info and links.
Please help us reach as many folk as possible by reposting. 🧪🌍🪱🪰🦟