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Menopause for killer whales involves mother-daughter conflict: study

Jan 12, 2017 | 9:56 AM

VICTORIA — A study released today says mother-daughter conflicts over competition and co-operation are helping explain why killer whales go through menopause.

Killer whales are one of only three species, including humans, who go through menopause, often living for decades after giving birth to their final calf.

Research published today by Canadian, American and British whale experts in the journal Current Biology examines the links between menopause and the relationships between so-called grandmother whales and young females within whale pods.

The research examines more than 40 years of data collected by whale scientists in the Salish Sea near Victoria and the San Juan Islands in the United States.