Distribution of foraging by female Antarctic fur seals

被引:94
作者
Boyd, IL [1 ]
Staniland, IJ
Martin, AR
机构
[1] Univ St Andrews, Gatty Marine Lab, Sea Mammal Res Unit, St Andrews KY16 8LB, Fife, Scotland
[2] British Antarctic Survey, NERC, Cambridge CB3 0ET, England
关键词
Southern Ocean; krill; dispersion; behavior; critical habitat ice edge; Patagonian Shelf; South Georgia; predator-prey interactions; Arctocephalus gazella;
D O I
10.3354/meps242285
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
The study examined the distribution of critical habitat for foraging by female Antarctic fur seals breeding at the island of South Georgia. Bathymetric features of the continental shelf around the island of South Georgia were an important indicator for the localisation of foraging. This pattern was consistent among years of different prey availability. Lactating females were constrained to forage mainly within 100 km of the location at which the offspring was being raised. When this constraint was removed at the end of lactation, females foraged to much greater ranges and dispersed to specific regions of the continental shelf east of Patagonia (>1000 km) and to the northern edge of the Antarctic pack ice (500 km). The empirical distribution of foraging during the breeding season was used to develop a function that described the foraging distribution for the whole breeding population of females. The result was consistent with past observations from ship-based surveys and it allowed estimation of the spatial impact of breeding female fur seals on krill at South Georgia. This suggested that, in extreme cases and assuming that krill influx is limited, female fur seals could eat most of the krill present in some regions where they forage intensively. However, mean consumption was about one-tenth of the mean density of krill.
引用
收藏
页码:285 / 294
页数:10
相关论文
共 39 条
[1]   The CCAMLR ecosystem monitoring programme [J].
Agnew, DJ .
ANTARCTIC SCIENCE, 1997, 9 (03) :235-242
[2]   ANTARCTIC MESOPELAGIC MICRONEKTON - EVIDENCE FROM SEABIRDS THAT PACK ICE AFFECTS COMMUNITY STRUCTURE [J].
AINLEY, DG ;
FRASER, WR ;
SULLIVAN, CW ;
TORRES, JJ ;
HOPKINS, TL ;
SMITH, WO .
SCIENCE, 1986, 232 (4752) :847-849
[3]   The relationship between foraging behaviour and energy expenditure in Antarctic fur seals [J].
Arnould, JPY ;
Boyd, IL ;
Speakman, JR .
JOURNAL OF ZOOLOGY, 1996, 239 :769-782
[4]   MESOSCALE DISTRIBUTION OF ZOOPLANKTON AROUND SOUTH-GEORGIA [J].
ATKINSON, A ;
WARD, P ;
PECK, JM ;
MURRAY, AWA .
DEEP-SEA RESEARCH PART A-OCEANOGRAPHIC RESEARCH PAPERS, 1990, 37 (08) :1213-1227
[5]   Interactions between harbour seals, Phoca vitulina, and fisheries in complex coastal waters explored by combined Geographic Information System (GIS) and energetics modelling [J].
Bjorge, A ;
Bekkby, T ;
Bakkestuen, V ;
Framstad, E .
ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2002, 59 (01) :29-42
[6]   Foraging ground fidelity and route-choice tactics of a marine predator:: the Antarctic fur seal Arctocephalus gazella [J].
Bonadonna, F ;
Lea, MA ;
Dehorter, O ;
Guinet, C .
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2001, 223 :287-297
[7]   Time and energy constraints in pinniped lactation [J].
Boyd, IL .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1998, 152 (05) :717-728
[8]   Variation in foraging effort by lactating Antarctic fur seals: Response to simulated increased foraging costs [J].
Boyd, IL ;
McCafferty, DJ ;
Walker, TR .
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY, 1997, 40 (03) :135-144
[9]   SWIMMING SPEED AND ALLOCATION OF TIME DURING THE DIVE CYCLE IN ANTARCTIC FUR SEALS [J].
BOYD, IL ;
REID, K ;
BEVAN, RM .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 1995, 50 :769-784
[10]   Foraging and provisioning in Antarctic fur seals: interannual variability in time-energy budgets [J].
Boyd, IL .
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY, 1999, 10 (02) :198-208