Postmortem body temperatures in the minke whale, Balaenoptera acutorostrata

Postmortem temperature regimes were measured in 11 minke whales, Balaenoptera acutorostrata, at tissue depths varying from 1.5 (in the blubber) to 30 cm, at two different sites on the whales' sides, one in the flipper region (site A) and one in the dorsal fin region (site B). Body temperatures of instantaneously killed whales were assumed to represent those of living animals. Core body temperatures were 35.0 °C at site A and 35.6 °C at site B. Core body temperature and the size of the thermal core were affected by blubber thickness and the time between harpoon strike and death, but were not influenced by duration of pursuit prior to harpooning. Both intra- and inter-specific comparisons reveal that the thickness of the blubber layer is important for the maintenance of thermal gradients and, thereby, for heat conservation.