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Researchers spent 13 years collecting DNA from 2,000 wild belugas in Alaska and found a mating secret that may be keeping the small population genetically alive

Emile Perreira by Emile Perreira
June 20, 2026 at 6:55 AM
in Earth
Beluga DNA study

In the cold waters of Alaska’s Bristol Bay, a very small group of belugas lives.

Year after year, scientists returned to the area, taking DNA samples. They built a map of genetics for this population.

Slowly, a clear pattern began to emerge.

The data revealed trends that did not match what researchers originally expected.

What did they discover after sampling 2,000 wild belugas in Alaska?

A population that defies expectations

On the surface, you wouldn’t expect anything about this population to survive as well as it does. There are approximately 2,000 belugas, and they are largely separated from all other beluga populations.

That separation normally leads to several problems, one of which is a loss of genetic diversity over time.

When this happens, survival may become difficult.

Scientists studied the population over a long period, and the results showed a predictable trend.

A few strong male individuals are expected to have a high reproductive success, which would reduce overall genetic diversity over generations.

This population did not act as predicted by the model.

Although relatively small and separated from all other beluga populations, it retained an unexpectedly high level of genetic diversity.

Why didn’t the genetic patterns behave as expected?

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A pattern that refused to fit expectations

As more samples were examined and additional data were collected over time, a clearer view of beluga families began to develop.

However, this view was far from clear-cut and did not match what scientists had originally expected.

Younger whales thought to be genetically similar, likely relatives, did not show the patterns of association that researchers had predicted. There were apparent familial ties where they should not have existed, and no clear ties where they were expected.

Even more puzzling, these family bonds did not form a core group around several adult whales but instead extended across the entire population.

This indicated that no single group was strongly influencing mating choices withing the broader population.

The pattern suggested the presence of an underlying but known process influencing how whales were connected across generations.

This is illustrated in belugas family tree DNA research and discussed in studies of mate-switching within Alaska’s population.

Toward the end of the data collection process, these unusual connections began to resemble unseen social networks extending across multiple overlapping groups. They pointed to a deeper structure connecting distantly related whale families across wide distances.

Since no single group was responsible for producing most of the next generation, what was behind this structuring mechanism?

A hidden process preserving genetic diversity

It did not resemble a clear answer at first, and the patterns remained difficult to interpret. The relationships appeared fragmented across the population, with no consistent structure linking them together.

Unusual hierarchies in relationships among whales, twisting family lines, and increasingly unpredictable connections continued to emerge over time.

A pattern that reveals itself only over time

Through analysis of the DNA collected shows that both male and female belugas continue to mate with different partners over their lifetime.

This was detailed in the report “DNA tests reveal mysterious beluga family trees” published in Frontiers.

These repeated mate-switching behaviors create a broad network of whales across the population. Many siblings share half or full parental lineage.

This spreads genetic links across generations instead of consolidating them within a few family lines.

Over time, this pattern preserves diversity and reduces inbreeding in a small, isolated group.

These whales do not establish long-term pair bonds with one another.

Instead, they form unstable relationships that continue to create new connections across each generation.

It poses an intriguing question. If this subtle process stabilizes one population, how many others use similar unseen patterns?

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