SciCafe: The Ocean’s Heated Rivalry
Schedule
Thu, 02 Apr, 2026 at 07:00 pm
UTC-04:00Location
American Museum of Natural History | Manhattan, NY
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SciCafe is 21+ and free with RSVP. For more information visit: https://bit.ly/4bweoK4Out of more than 38,000 species of fishes, why are only about 42 endothermic—or “warm-blooded?”
Fernando Melendez Vazquez, marine biologist and manager of the Science Research Mentoring Program (SRMP) at the Museum, set out to answer that question by helping build the largest evolutionary tree of fishes to date. What he and his collaborators found was unexpected: Endothermy—the ability to generate and maintain an elevated body temperature through metabolic heat—in tunas, billfishes, and great white sharks may have evolved in response to competition with marine mammals, such as whales, which re-entered the oceans some 50 million years ago.
By combining fossil evidence, evolutionary models, and genomic data from more than 1,000 marine vertebrates, this research reveals the first evidence of an evolutionary “arms race” between fishes and cetaceans (whales, dolphins, and porpoises). Even more striking, the same genes appear to be actively evolving across endothermic marine animals, suggesting shared biological solutions to life in cold oceans.
From ancient seas to modern DNA, this SciCafe reframes endothermy not as a biological oddity, but as evolution in action—shaped by competition, collaboration, and deep time.
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Where is it happening?
American Museum of Natural History, ATM, Central Park W, New York, NY 10024, United States, ManhattanEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
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