
ANDREW
TRITES, PhD
Professor
Tel: 604.822.8182
Fax: 604.822.8180
E-mail: a.trites@fisheries.ubc.ca
Education: BSc Mathematics & Ecology (McGill University); MSc Zoology (UBC);
PhD Zoology (UBC)
Courses Taught: Fish 506 – Critical
Issues in Fisheries; Mar. Sci. 455 –
Biology of Marine Mammals; Scie 300 –
Communicating Science
Research Interests: biology of marine mammals, population dynamics, bioenergetics, fisheries, data analysis
Professional Credentials:
| Professor |
UBC Fisheries Centre |
| Director |
UBC Marine Mammal Research Unit |
| Director |
North Pacific Universities Marine Mammal Research Consortium |
| Associate Member |
UBC Department of Zoology |
| Research Associate |
Vancouver Aquarium |
| Member |
PICES Advisory Panel on Marine Birds and Mammals |
| Member |
Marine Mammal Specialist Group for the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) |
Research: My research is primarily focussed on pinnipeds (Steller sea lions, northern fur seals, and harbor seals) and involves captive studies, field studies and simulation models that range from single species to whole ecosystems. My research program is designed to further the conservation and understanding of marine mammals, and resolve conflicts between people and marine mammals. I oversee a research program that includes researchers, students, technicians and support staff. The training of students, and the collaboration between researchers specializing in other disciplines (such as nutrition, ecology, physiology and oceanography) is central to the success of my research program.
1. Patch Dynamics. We are studying birds, mammals and their forage bases to determine the consequences of spatial patterns (patches) on predator-prey dynamics in the Bering Sea. This coordinated study involving researchers from 5 institutions is seeking to determine how groups of species (walrus, fur seals, kittiwakes, and murres, pollock, and bivalves) are controlled by fishing, predators, food availability, the physical environment or a combination of all four. (see link).
Tagging Pacific walrus with satellite tracking devices.
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2. Blue Whale Project. In May 2010, we completed a 3 year project to recovery and articulate a blue whale skeleton for the Beaty Biodiversity Museum. The 25 m blue whale was buried in Prince Edward Island in November 1987 and was still covered in skin and blubber when we uncovered her 20 years later. Removing the rancid oil from her bones and repairing the extensive damage to her broken and shattered bones was a massive undertaken that involved the efforts of over 100 people. Big Blue is on display in the entrance to the Beaty Biodiversity Museum in the center of campus
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3. Steller sea lions. The disappearance of Steller sea lions from the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands since the mid 1970s is a major ecological mystery. Through the North Pacific Universities Marine Mammal Research Consortium, we have tried to test all of the major hypotheses. Predation by killer whales, competition with fisheries, and reproductive failure associated with consuming large amounts of low energy fish (e.g., pollock or Pacific cod) have not yet been refuted. We continue to test these three leading hypotheses using a combination of field studies, captive experiments and retrospective modelling and data analysis. (see link).
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Counting Steller sea lions at a haulout
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4. Northern fur seals. The cause of the Steller sea lion decline may be linked to the dramatic fall of northern fur seals on the Pribilof Islands. In addition to studying a captive colony of fur seals at the Vancouver Aquarium, we are also conducting research on the Pribilof Islands to assess whether fur seals are experiencing food shortages that could be caused by fishing or natural changes in the ecosystem. (see link).
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Gluing a GPS-tracking tag to the fur |
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5. Harbor seals. Harbour seals have been implicated in the decline of sockeye, chinook and coho salmon in British Columbia. Harbour seals in the Strait of Georgia have recovered from culling and are the highest density population of harbour seals found anywhere in the world. We are initiating a new research program to determine diets and foraging behavior of seals in the Strait of Georgia and the effects that predation are having on the lack of recovery of commercially important fish species. Research invovles a combination of field and mathematical modelling studies.
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Harbour seal mother and pup |
| Graduate Student Opportunities: I generally accept one to two students per year through the Department of Zoology (See how-to-apply). Current thesis topics are described in the graduate student homepages, and completed theses are listed below. Research topics have spanned the fields of animal behavior, physiology, molecular ecology, biomechanics, ecosystem modelling, habitat modelling, population dynamics, and predator-prey interactions. |
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Publications:
> Refereed > Non-refereed
Refereed Publications:
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Distribution and relative abundance of humpback whales in relation to environmental variables in coastal British Columbia and adjacent waters.
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Dalla Rosa, L., J.K. Ford and A.W. Trites. (in press).
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Continental Shelf Research
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abstract
Humpback whales are common in feeding areas off British Columbia (BC) from spring to fall, and are widely distributed along the coast. Climate change and the increase in population size of North Pacific humpback whales may lead to increased anthropogenic impact and require a better understanding of species-habitat relationships. We investigated the distribution and relative abundance of humpback whales in relation to environmental variables and processes in BC waters using GIS and generalized additive models (GAMs). Six non-systematic cetacean surveys were conducted between 2004 and 2006. Whale encounter rates and environmental variables (oceanographic and remote sensing data) were recorded along transects divided into 4 km segments. A combined 3-year model and individual year models (two surveys each) were fitted with the mgcv R package. Model selection was based primarily on GCV scores. The explained deviance of our models ranged from 39% for the 3-year model to 76% for the 2004 model. Humpback whales were strongly associated with latitude and bathymetric features, including depth, slope and distance to the 100-m isobath. Distance to sea-surface-temperature fronts and salinity (climatology) were also constantly selected by the models. The shapes of smooth functions estimated for variables based on chlorophyll concentration or net primary productivity with different temporal resolutions and time lags were not consistent, even though higher numbers of whales seemed to be associated with higher primary productivity for some models. These and other selected explanatory variables may reflect areas of higher biological productivity that favor top predators. Our study confirms the presence of at least three important regions for humpback whales along the BC coast: south Dixon Entrance, middle and southwestern Hecate Strait, and the area between La Perouse Bank and the southern edge of Juan de Fuca Canyon.
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Rates of maximum food intake in young northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) and the seasonal effects of food intake on body growth.
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Rosen, D., B.L. Young and A.W. Trites. 2012.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 90:61-91.
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abstract
Accurate estimates of food intake and its subsequent affect on growth are required to understand the interaction between an animals‚ physiology and its biotic environment. We determined how food intake and growth of 6 young northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus L., 1758) responded seasonally to changes in food availability. Animals were given unrestricted access to prey for 8 hr per day on either consecutive days or on alternate days only. We found animals offered ad libitum food on consecutive days substantially increased their food intake over normal Œtraining‚ levels. However, animals that fasted on alternative days were unable to compensate by further increasing their levels of consumption on subsequent feeding days. Absolute levels of food intake were highly consistent during winter and summer trials (2.7 ˆ 2.9 kg d-1), but seasonal differences in body mass meant that fur seals consumed more food relative to their body mass in summer (~27%) than in winter (~20%). Despite significant increases in absolute food intake during both seasons, the fur seals did not appear to efficiently convert this additional energy into mass growth, particularly in the winter. These seasonal differences in conversion efficiencies and estimates of maximum intake rates can be used to generate physiologically realistic predictions about the effect of changes in food availability on an individual fur as well as the consequences for an entire population.
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An independent, scientific review of the Biological Opinion (2010) of the National Marine Fisheries Service Fisheries Management Plan for the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands management areas.
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Bernard, D.R., S.J. Jeffries, G. Knapp, and A.W. Trites. 2011.
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In Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Special Publication. Vol 11-16 pp. 136
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abstract
This special publication contains the final report of an independent scientific and economic review of a Biological Opinion (BiOp) issued 24 November, 2010 by the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) on the Fisheries Management Plan (FMP) for the Bering Sea and Aleutian Islands (BSAI) Management Area under a section 7 consultation required by the Endangered Species Act. The BiOp involved the western distinct population segment (WDPS) of Steller sea lions Eumetopias jubatus, the conclusion of which is a finding that fisheries in the western and central Aleutian Islands placed the WDPS in jeopardy of recovery through adverse modification of habitat. The review panel evaluated the scientific evidence and argument given in support of this finding against the scientific requirements of the Endangered Species Act based on consistency, validity, and biologic relevance. The review panel also evaluated the economic analyses that formed the basis for the reasonable and prudent actions arising from the finding. The review panel followed only the terms of reference as published in this final report, and in their deliberations, considered written testimony and testimony provided at two public meetings, one in Seattle on June 2, 2011, and the other in Anchorage on August 22, 2011. The conclusions of the review panel can be found in total in the executive summary and in part at the end of each chapter of the special publication.
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Proportion of prey consumed can be determined from faecal DNA using real-time PCR.
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Bowles, E., P.M. Schulte, D.J. Tollit, B.E. Deagle and A.W. Trites. 2011.
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Molecular Ecology Resources 11:530-540.
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abstract
Reconstructing the diets of pinnipeds by visually identifying prey remains recovered in faecal samples is challenging because of differences in digestion and passage rates of hard parts. Analyzing the soft-matrix of faecal material using DNA-based techniques is an alternative means to identify prey species consumed, but published techniques are largely non-quantitative, which limits their usefulness for some studies. We further developed and validated a real-time PCR technique using species-specific mitochondrial DNA primers to quantify the proportion of prey in the diets of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus), a pinniped species thought to be facing significant diet related challenges in the North Pacific. We first demonstrated that the proportions of prey tissue DNA in mixtures of DNA isolated from four prey species could be estimated within a margin of ~12% of the percent in the mix. These prey species included herring Clupea palasii, eulachon Thaleichthyes pacificus, squid Loligo opalescens and rosethorn rockfish Sebastes helvomaculatus. We then applied real-time PCR to DNA extracted from faecal samples obtained from Steller sea lions in captivity that were fed 11 different combinations of herring, eulachon, squid and Pacific ocean perch rockfish (Sebastes alutus), ranging from 7-75% contributions per meal (by wet weight). The difference between the average percentage estimated by real-time PCR and the percentage of prey consumed was generally less than 12% for all diets fed. Our findings indicate that real-time PCR of faecal DNA can detect the approximate relative quantity of prey consumed for complex diets and prey species, including cephalopods and fish.
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Predation on Fraser River sockeye salmon.
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Christensen, V. and A.W. Trites. 2011.
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In Cohen Commission Technical Report. www.cohencommission.ca. Vancouver, B.C. pp. 129
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abstract
A review of the available scientific literature reveals a wide range of species holding the remains of sockeye salmon in their stomachs, but only a few of these predators have specialized in targeting sockeye, and there are no studies showing that a predator has consumed sufficient numbers over the past three decades to pose a population threat to sockeye salmon. There is no sign of a smoking gun among the long list of potential
predators of Fraser River sockeye salmon.
In the open ocean, sockeye salmon appear to draw the predatory attention of salmon sharks, blue sharks, and an obscure species fittingly called daggertooth. All three species likely increased in recent decades (after the 1992 UN ban on driftnet fisheries) ˜ and two of them (salmon sharks and daggertooth) may favor sockeye. Unfortunately, data for these species is also too sparse to draw conclusions about their otential role in the poor return of Fraser River sockeye in 2009, but their life histories suggest relatively stable numbers that should not have exerted greater predation upon sockeye in any single year relative to others.
In addition to the daggertooth and sharks, marine mammals also consume adult sockeye salmon. However, sockeye are not an important part of marine mammal diets compared to the other species of salmon. No studies have reported marine mammals consuming sockeye salmon in the open ocean. However, small amounts of sockeye have been found in the stomachs or fecal samples collected from Steller sea lions, northern fur seals, harbour seals, killer whales, and white-sided dolphins feeding over the continental shelf and inside waters of British Columbia. Seal and sea lion populations have increased significantly in British Columbia and southeast Alaska since the late 1970s. However, the available data indicate that sockeye salmon is not a preferred prey species among
marine mammals.
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Convergent evolution in locomotory patterns of flying and swimming animals.
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Gleiss, A.C., S.J. Jorgensen, N. Liebsch, J.E. Sala, B. Norman, G.C. Hays, F. Quintana, E. Grundy, C. Campagna, A.W. Trites, B.A. Block and R.P. Wilson. 2011.
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Nature Communications Vol 2:352(doi: 3101038/ncomms1351)
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abstract
Locomotion is one of the major energetic costs faced by animals and various strategies have evolved to reduce its cost. Birds use interspersed periods of flapping and gliding to reduce the mechanical requirements of level flight while undergoing cyclical changes in flight altitude, known as undulating flight. Here we equipped free-ranging marine vertebrates with accelerometers and demonstrate that gait patterns resembling undulating flight occur in four marine vertebrate species comprising sharks and pinnipeds. Both sharks and pinnipeds display intermittent gliding interspersed with powered locomotion. We suggest, that the convergent use of similar gait patterns by distinct groups of animals points to universal physical and physiological principles that operate beyond taxonomic limits and shape common solutions to increase energetic efficiency. Energetically expensive large-scale migrations performed by many vertebrates provide common selection pressure for efficient locomotion, with potential for the convergence of locomotory strategies by a wide variety of species.
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Cohort effects and spatial variation in age-specific survival of Steller sea lions from southeastern Alaska.
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Hastings, K.K., L.A. Jemison, T.S Gelatt, J.L. Laake, G. Pendelton, J.C. King, A.W. Trites and K.W. Pitcher. 2011.
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Ecosphere 2 111:doi:101890/ES11-0.
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abstract
Information concerning mechanistic processes underlying changes in vital rates and ultimately population growth rate is required to monitor impacts of environmental change on wildlife. We estimated age-specific survival and examined factors influencing survival for a threatened population of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in southeastern Alaska. We used mark-recapture models and data from 1,995 individuals marked at approximately one month of age at four of five rookeries in southeastern Alaska, and resighted from Oregon to the Bering Sea. Average annual survival probability for females was .64 for pups and 0.77 for yearlings, and increased from 0.91 to 0.96 from age 3ˆ7 yrs. Annual survival probability of males averaged 0.60 for pups and 0.88 by 7 yrs, resulting in probability of survival to age 7, 33% lower for males compared to females. Pups from northern southeastern Alaska (including an area of low summer population size but rapid growth) were twice as likely to survive to age 7 compared to pups from southern rookeries (including a large, historical, stable rookery). Effects of early conditions on future fitness were observed as (1) environmental conditions in the birth year equally affected first- and second year survival, and (2) effects of body mass at approximately one month of age were still apparent at 7 yrs. Survival from 0ˆ2 yrs varied among five cohorts by a maximum absolute difference of 0.12. We observed survival costs for long-distance dispersal for males, particularly as juveniles. However, survival was higher for non-pups that dispersed to northern southeastern Alaska, suggesting that moving to an area with greater productivity, greater safety, or lower population size may alleviate a poor start and provide a mechanism for spatial structure for sea lion populations.
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South American sea lions in Peru have a lek-like breeding system.
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Soto, K.H. and A.W. Trites. 2011.
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Marine Mammal Science 307:306-333.
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abstract
Five years of behavioral observations revealed significant effects of high air temperatures and breeding site topography on the mating system of South American sea lions in Peru. Unlike most polygynous mammals that defend females or fixed territories, male sea lions in Peru maintained positions along the shoreline where females passed each day to thermoregulate, and where most copulations occurred. Sex ratios (1 male per 17 females) and male mating success were extremely skewed (14% of males achieved 50% of the copulations, and 25% of them did not copulate at all). The mass daily movements of females toward the water and cool substrate of the shoreline, along with a highly skewed sex ratio, accentuated the difficulty for males to monopolize and restrict female movements. Femalesmoved freely and chose their mates, unlike in temperate regions of their range where male South American sea lions control groups of females or access to tide pools. Our observations indicate that the South American sea lion in Peru has a lek-like breeding system. This is a rare alternative to the common male strategies of defending females and resources, and is likely an evolutionary product of their highly skewed sex ratio, protracted breeding season, and the extreme subtropical climate where they breed.
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A review of the effects of different marking and tagging techniques on marine mammals.
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Walker, K. A., A. W. Trites, M. Haulena and D. M. Weary. 2011.
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DOI:10.1071/WR10177.
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abstract
Wildlife research often requires marking and tagging animals to collect data on survival, reproduction, movement, behaviour and physiology. Identification of individual marine mammals can be carried out using tags, brands, paint, dye, photogrammetry, telemetry and other techniques. An analysis of peer-reviewed articles published from January 1980 to April 2011 addressing the effects of marking revealed a preponderance of studies focussed on short-term effects such as injuries and behavioural changes. Some marking techniques were reported to cause pain and to change swimming and haul-out behaviour, maternal attendance, and duration of foraging trips. However,marking has typically not been found to affect survival. No published research has addressed other possible long-term effects of marking related to injuries or pain responses. Studies of the more immediate effects of marking (mostly related to externally attached devices such as radio-transmitters) have shown a variety of different types and magnitudes of responses. It is important to note that
studies failing to find treament differences are less likely to be published, meaning that the present and any other reviews based on published literaturemay be a biased sample of all research conducted on the topic. Publishing results that found no or low impacts (i.e. best practices) as well as those that found significant impacts on animals should both be encouraged. Future research under more controlled conditions is required to document acute effects of marking, including injury and pain, and to better understand longer-term effects on health, reproduction and survival. We recommend that studies using
marked animals standardise their reports, with added detail on methodology, monitoring and sampling design, and address
practices used to minimise the impact of marking on marine mammals.
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Dive behaviour impacts the ability of heart rate to predict oxygen consumption in Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) foraging at depth.
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Young, B. L., D. A. S. Rosen, A. G. Hindle, M. Haulena and A. W. Trites. 2011.
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Journal of Experimental Biology 214:2267-2275.
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abstract
The predictive relationship between heart rate (fH) and oxygen consumption (VO2) has been derived for several species of marine mammals swimming horizontally or diving in tanks to shallow depths. However, it is unclear how dive activity affects the fH:VO2 relationship and whether the existing equations apply to animals diving to deeper depths. We investigated these questions by
simultaneously measuring the fH and VO2 of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) under different activity states (surface resting or diving), types of dives (single dives or dive bouts), and depths (10 or 40m). We examined the relationship over dives only and also over dive cycles (dive + surface interval). We found that fH could only predict VO2 over a complete single dive cycle or dive bout cycle (i.e. surface intervals had to be included). The predictive equation derived for sea lions resting on the surface did not differ from that for single dive cycles. However, the equation derived over dive bout cycles multiple dives + surface intervals) differed from those for single dive cycles or surface resting, with similar fH for multiple dive bout equations yielding higher
predicted VO2 than that for single dive bout cycles (or resting). The fH:VO2 relationships were not significantly affected by dive duration, dive depth, water temperature or cumulative food consumed under the conditions tested. Ultimately, our results demonstrate that fH can be used to predict activity-specific metabolic rates of diving Steller sea lions, but only over complete dive
cycles that include a post-dive surface recovery period.
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Environment and feeding change the ability of heart rate to predict metabolism in resting Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Young, B. L., D.A.S. Rosen, M. Haulena, A. G. Hindle and A.W. Trites. 2011.
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Journal of Comparative Physiology-B 118:105-116.
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abstract
The ability to use heart rate (fh) to predict oxygen consumption rates (VO2) in Steller sea lions and other pinnipeds has been investigated in fasting animals. However, it is unknown whether established fh:VO2 relationships hold under more complex physiological situations, such as when animals are feeding or digesting. We assessed whether fh could accurately predict VO2 in trained Steller sea lions while fasting and after being fed. Using linear mixed-effects models, we derived unique equations to describe the fh:VO2 relationship for fasted sea lions resting on land and in water. Feeding did not significantly change the fh:VO2 relationship on land. However, Steller sea lions in water displayed a different fh:VO2 relationship after consuming a 4 kg meal compared to the fasting condition. Incorporating comparable published fh:VO2 data from Steller sea lions showed a distinct effect of feeding after a 6 kg meal. Ultimately, our study illustrated that both feeding and physical environment are statistically relevant when deriving VO2 from telemetered fh, but that only environment affects the practical ability to predict metabolism from fh. Updating current bioenergetic models with data gathered using these predictive fh:VO2 equations will yield more accurate estimates of metabolic rates of free-ranging Steller sea lions under a variety of physiological, behavioral, and environmental states.
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Swimming depth and ocean currents affect transiting costs in Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Hindle, A.G., D.A.S. Rosen and A.W. Trites. 2010.
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Aquatic Biology 10:139-148.
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abstract
Transit costs associated with commuting between resting sites ashore and foraging areas at sea are an appreciable portion of foraging expenditures in pinnipeds. We examined transit swimming in three Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) trained to follow a moving boat at different speeds and depths. We measured dive behavior (duration) and focused specifically on activity measures (fore-flipper stroking and ODBA, an overall measure of body motion), which may be proxies for metabolic expenditure. Sea lions appeared to increase efficiency while transiting at depths that approached three times their body diameters (mean depth = 151 ± 1 cm SEM, n = 87). Although the response was not uniform for all tested scenarios, all of the significant adjustments we observed to dive behavior and swimming mechanics supported an increased efficiency at this depth. An increase in transit speed (4.5 versus 3.5 knots surface speed) was associated with elevated flipper stroke frequencies (+5%) and stroke output (ODBA•stroke-1, +48%). Sea lions transiting against the flow of a tidal current had reduced dive durations (-10%), while total ODBA was consistently elevated (+8% overall). This response to tidal flow was accompanied either by elevated ODBA•stroke-1 (3.5 knots) or a parallel increase in stroking (4.5 knots). Our data demonstrate that small changes in the physical environment affect transiting in Steller sea lions, and imply that altered prey fields or changing ocean conditions can carry energetic consequences.
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Dive response differs between shallow- and deep-diving Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Hindle, A.G., B.L. Young, D.A.S. Rosen, M. Haulena and A.W. Trites. 2010.
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Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 394:141-148.
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abstract
Muscle exercise correlates with oxygen use, tissue perfusion and heart rate (fH) in terrestrial animals, but the relationship between these physiological processes is less clear in diving animals. We found the mean heart rate of Steller sea lions trained to voluntarily dive to depths up to 40m dropped by 40% while diving, and noted that mean bradycardia was 9% greater during shallow (10m) compared to deep (40m) dives. Longer dives resulted in lower heart rates, but only when they were shallow; on the other hand, minimum instantaneous fH decreased consistently with dive duration. In general, instantaneous fH did not reflect activity over short timescales. Our data suggest that our sea lions invoked a different dive response depending on whether they dove to shallow or deep depths. During shallow (10m) dives only, the correlation between activity and fH was indicative of vascular compromise between diving and exercise. However, during deep dives (40m), there was no such correlation, suggesting that locomotory activity was uncoupled from dive bradycardia, which was possibly mediated by an absence of blood flow to active muscle. For both diving scenarios, surface fH correlated with dive activity, suggesting that some underwater locomotory costs were deferred to the post-dive surface interval. Ultimately, our data support the speculation that Steller sea lion locomotory muscles become hypoxic during diving, regardless of dive depth.
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Fecal triiodothyronine and thyroxine concentrations change in response to thyroid stimulation in Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Keech, A.L., D.A.S. Rosen, R.K. Nelson Booth, A.W. Trites and S.K. Wasser. 2010.
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General and Comparative Endocrinology 166:180-185.
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abstract
Variation in concentrations of thyroid hormones shed in feces may help to identify physiological states of animals, but the efficacy of the technique needs to be validated for each species. We determined whether a known physiological alteration to thyroid hormone production was reflected in hormone concentrations in the feces of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus). We quantified variation of triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4) concentrations in feces following two intramuscular injections of thyrotropin (thyroid-stimulating hormone, TSH) at 24 h intervals in four captive female sea lions. We found fecal T3 concentrations increased 18-57% over concentrations measured in the baseline sample collected closest to the time of the first TSH injection (p=0.03) and 1-75% over the mean baseline concentration (p=0.12) for each animal of all samples collected prior to injections. The peak T3 response occurred 48 h post injection in three animals and 71 h in the fourth. Post-injection T4 concentrations did not differ between the baseline sample collected closest to the time of the first TSH injection (p=0.29) or the mean baseline concentration (p=0.23) for each animal. These results indicate that induced physiological alterations to circulating thyroid hormone concentrations can be adequately detected through analyses of fecal T3 concentrations and that the technique may provide a means of non-invasively detecting metabolic changes in Steller sea lions.
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Growth rates and differential investment in male and female Juan Fernández fur seal pups.
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Osman, L.P., C.A. Moreno and A.W. Trites. 2010.
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Journal of Mammalogy 91:1188-1196.
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abstract
Male Juan Fernández fur seals (Arctocephalus philippii) are significantly larger than females at birth and show extreme dimorphism as adults. We investigated morphological differences among male and female pups using a cross-sectional sampling design to evaluate whether pup growth rates during the breeding season were sex-specific. We characterized growth rates using mass, length, and girth and found that length was the least variable measure of body growth (based on the coefficients of variation for the three measures of body size). Male pups were heavier on average than female pups on any given day of sampling but did not grow faster than females. No significant differences were noted in the body conditions of male and female pups. These findings suggest that the sexual differences among A. philippii pups originate before birth and are not accentuated while suckling during the breeding season.
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Prey capture attempts can be detected in Steller sea lions and other marine predators using accelerometers.
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Viviant, M., A.W. Trites, D.A.S. Rosen, P. Monestiez and C. Guinet. 2010.
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Polar Biology 33:713-719.
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abstract
We attached accelerometers to the head and jaw of a Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) to determine whether feeding attempts in a controlled setting could be quantified by acceleration features characteristic of head and jaw movements. Most of the 19 experimental feeding events that occurred during the 51 dives recorded resulted in specific acceleration patterns that were clearly distinguishable from swimming accelerations. The differential acceleration between the head-mounted and jaw-mounted accelerometers detected 84% of prey captures on the vertical axis and 89% on the horizontal axis. However, the jaw-mounted accelerometer alone proved to be equally effective at detecting prey capture attempts. Acceleration along the horizontal (surge)-axis appeared to be particularly efficient in detecting prey captures, and suggests that a single accelerometer placed under the jaw of a pinniped is a promising and easily implemented means of recording prey capture attempts.
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Lamination for subdermal implant fixation.
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Hori, B.D., R.J. Petrell, A.W. Trites, and T. Godbey. 2009.
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Journal of Biomedical Materials Research: Part B - Applied Biomaterials 91B:17-25.
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abstract
hirty-six aluminum oxide laminated discs were implanted into 12 young rabbits (18 with a 0.5 mm porous layer and 18 with 1 mm) to determine whether implants that are porous only on one side could fixate to subcutaneous tissue. After 3 months, discs were encased within thin pouches (0.02-0.14 mm) of fibrous connective tissue, as would have been expected of a completely porous implant. Solid sides showed no while the porous sides showed little attachment to pouches. 47% (17) of the discs had moved 1.4±0.8 cm beyond the 4.7 + 1 cm they had moved due to normal skin growth, while two others had moved between 6.2 and 6.5 cm beyond this measure. The proportion of 1 mm porous layer discs migrating within subcutaneous tissue was no greater than the proportion of 0.5 mm layer discs migrating (p=0.15). Porous layer height and disc migration did not affect the attachment strength of pouch to surrounding tissues (68 ±23 N, p=0.34). Pouch thickness, which has been associated to the level of applied forces in other studies, increased with migration distance (p=0.054). Results indicate that one sided porous disks are likely easier to retrieve than completely porous ones, but cannot be prevented from migrating in loose tissue of young animals. Data is being used to design subdermal radio frequency devices for endangered marine animals.
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Changes in glucocorticoids, IGF-I and thyroid hormones as indicators of nutritional stress and subsequent refeeding in Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Jeanniard du Dot T., Rosen D.A., Richmond, J.P., Kitaysky A.S., Zinn, S.A. and Trites A.W. 2009.
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Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part A 152:524-534.
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abstract
Physiological responses to changes in energy balance are tightly regulated by the endocrine system through glucocorticoids, IGF-I and thyroid hormones. Changes in these hormones were studied in eight captive female Steller sea lions that experienced changes in food intake, body mass, body composition, and blood metabolites during summer and winter. During a period of energy restriction, one group of sea lions was fed reduced amounts of Pacific herring and another was fed an isocaloric diet of walleye pollock, after which both groups returned to their pre-experimental diets of herring. Cortisol was negatively and IGF-I was positively associated with changes in body mass during periods of energy restriction (mass loss associated with increase in cortisol and decrease in IGF-I) and refeeding (body mass maintenance associated with stable hormone concentrations in summer and compensatory growth linked to decrease in cortisol and increase in IGF-I in winter). Cortisol and IGF-I were also correlated with changes in lipid and lean mass, respectively. Consequently, these two hormones likely make adequate biomarkers for nutritional stress in sea lions, and when combined provide indication of the energetic strategy (lipid vs lean mass catabolism) animals adopt to cope with changes in nutrient intake. Unlike type of diet fed to the sea lions, age of the animals also impacted hormonal responses, with younger animals showing more intense hormonal changes to nutritional stress. Thyroid hormones, however, were not linked to any physiological changes observed in this study.
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Energy reallocation during and after periods of nutritional stress in Steller sea lions: low-quality diet reduces capacity for physiological adjustments.
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Jeanniard du Dot, T., D.A.S Rosen and A.W. Trites. 2009.
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Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 89:516-530.
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abstract
Two groups of female Steller sea lions (Groups H and P) were subjected to periods of energy restriction and subsequent re-feeding during winter and summer to determine changes in energy partition among principal physiological functions and the potential consequences to their fitness. Both sea lion groups consumed high-quality fish (herring) before and after the energy restrictions. During restrictions, Group H was fed a lower quantity of herring and Group P a caloric equivalent of low-quality fish (pollock). Quantitative estimates of maintenance and production energies and qualitative estimates of thermoregulation, activity and basal metabolic rate were measured. During summer, all animals compensated for the imposed energy deficit by releasing stored energy (production energy). Group H also optimized the energy allocation to seasonal conditions by increasing activity during summer when fish are naturally abundant (foraging effort) and by decreasing thermoregulation capacity when waters are warmer. During winter, both groups decreased the energy allocated to overall maintenance functions (basal metabolic rate, thermoregulation and activity together) in addition to releasing stored energy, but preserved thermoregulatory capacity. Group H also decreased activity levels in winter when foraging in the wild is less efficient, unlike Group P. Overall, sea lions fed pollock did not change energy allocation to suit environmental conditions as readily as those fed herring. This implies that low energy density diet may further reduce fitness of animals in the wild during periods of nutritional stress.
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Seasonal differences in biochemical adaptation to fasting in juvenile and subadult Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Rea, L.D., M. Berman-Kowalewski, D.A.S. Rosen, and A. W.Trites. 2009.
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Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 82:236-247.
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abstract
Nine Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) aged 1.756 yr were experimentally fasted for 714 d during the breeding and nonbreeding seasons to identify changes in plasma metabolites that are indicative of fasting and to determine whether the ability of sea lions to fast varies seasonally or with age. Although some animals approached the limit of their protein-sparing ability by the end of our fasting experiments, there was no sign of irreversible starvation biochemistry. Plasma blood urea nitrogen (BUN) concentrations decreased in all animals within the first week of fasting, reflecting a shift to a fasting-adapted state;
however, significant increases in plasma BUN concentration at the end of the nonbreeding season fasts suggest that subadult Steller sea lions were not able to maintain a protein-sparing metabolism for a full 14 d during the nonbreeding season. In contrast, juveniles were able to enter protein sparing sooner during the nonbreeding season when they had slightly higher initial percent total body lipid stores than during the breeding season. Subadult and juvenile sea lions had low circulating ketone body concentrations compared with young sea lion pups, suggesting an age-related difference in how body reserves are utilized during fasting or how the resulting metabolites are circulated and catabolized. Our data suggest that metabolite concentrations from a single blood sample cannot be used to accurately predict the duration of fast; however, threshold metabolite concentrations may still be useful for assessing whether periods of fasting in the wild are unusually long compared with those normally experienced.
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Steller sea lion foraging response to seasonal changes in prey availability.
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Sigler, M.F., D.J. Tollit, J.J. Vollenweider, J.F. Thedinga, D.J. Csepp, J.N. Womble, M.A. Wong, M.J. Rehberg and A.W. Trites. 2009.
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Marine Ecology Progress Series 388:243-261.
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abstract
We hypothesized that: (1) Steller sea lion Eumetopias jubatus diet choice is a function of prey availability, (2) sea lions move to take advantage of times and locations of seasonal prey concentrations and (3) the number present depends on the amount of prey available (numerical response). Over 3 yr, typically on a quarterly basis, in Frederick Sound, SE Alaska, multiple measurements were taken of Steller sea lion abundance (aerial surveys), diet (scats), dive behavior (satellite telemetry)and prey availability and caloric density (nearshore, pelagic and demersal fish surveys). We found that Steller sea lions shifted diet composition in response to changes in prey availability of pollock Theragra chalcogramma, hake Merluccius productus, herring Clupea pallasi and salmon Oncorhynchus spp. They selected intermediate-sized fish and avoided small (<10 cm) and large (>60 cm) fish, and moved between areas as prey became available seasonally. The number of sea lions present depended on the amount of prey available; a standing biomass of 500 to 1700 t of prey in a nonbreeding area such as Frederick Sound, depending on species composition, can attract and sustain about 500 sea lions. Pollock was more frequent in sea lion diet in inside waters of SE Alaska including Frederick Sound, Stephens Passage and Lynn Canal than anywhere else in Alaska and contributed about one-third of the dietary energy in Frederick Sound. This finding implies that a diet with substantial year-round contributions from less nutritious, but abundant prey such as pollock can form part of a healthy diet as long as more nutritious prey such as herring, salmon or eulachon Thaleichthys pacificus also are consumed. Our study supports the conclusion that the Steller sea lion is an opportunistic marine predator with a flexible foraging strategy that selects abundant, accessible prey and shifts among seasonally available species.
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Fasting affects the surface and diving metabolic rates of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Svärd, C., A. Fahlman, D.A.S. Rosen, R. Joy and A.W. and Trites. 2009.
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Aquatic Biology 8:71-82.
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abstract
Changes in metabolic rates were measured in 3 captive female Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) that experienced fasts during summer and winter. Metabolic rates were measured (via O2 consumption) before (MRs, surface) and after (DMR, dive + surface interval) the sea lions dove to 10–50 m depths. Measurements were obtained prior to 9-10 day fasts, and following a 14 day recovery period. The sea lions lost significantly more body mass (Mb) during the winter fast (10.6%), compared with the summer (9.5%). Mass-corrected dive metabolic rate (cDMR = DMR • Mb-0.714) was not affected by dive depth or duration, but increased significantly following the winter fasts (13.5 ± 8.1%), unlike the decrease during summer (-1.1 ± 3.2%). However, mass-corrected surface metabolic rate (cMRs) decreased significantly after both the summer (-16.4 ± 4.7%) and winter (-8.0 ± 9.0%) fasts. Consequently, the ratio between cDMR and cMRc was significantly higher in winter, suggestive of an increased thermal challenge and convective heat loss while diving. Increased cDMs following the fast indicated that digestion began during foraging and was not deferred, implying that access to ingested energy was of higher priority than optimizing diving ability. cDMR was elevated throughout the recovery period, independent of season, resulting in a 12% increase in foraging cost in winter and a 3% increase in summer. Our data suggest that Steller sea lions are more sensitive to changes in body condition due to food shortages in the winter compared with the summer.
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Development and application of DNA techniques for validating and improving pinniped diet estimates.
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Tollit, D. J., A. D. Schulze, A. W. Trites, P. F. Olesiuk, S. J. Crockford, T. S. Gelatt, R. R. Ream, K. M. Miller. 2009.
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Ecological Applications 19:889-905.
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abstract
Polymerase chain reaction techniques were developed and applied to identify DNA from >40 species of prey contained in fecal (scat) soft part matrix collected at terrestrial sites used by Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in British Columbia and the Eastern Aleutian Islands, Alaska. Sixty percent more fish and cephalopod prey were identified by morphological analyses of hard parts compared with DNA analysis of soft parts (hard parts identified higher relative proportions of Ammodytes sp., Cottidae and certain Gadidae). DNA identified 213 prey occurrences of which 75 (35%) were undetected by hard parts (mainly Salmonidae, Pleuronectidae, Elasmobranchii and Cephalopoda), and thereby increased species occurrences by 22% overall and species richness in 44% of cases (when comparing 110 scats that amplified prey DNA). Prey composition was identical within only 20% of scats. Overall, diet composition derived from both identification techniques combined did not differ significantly from hard part identification alone, suggesting that past scat-based diet studies have not missed major dietary components. However, significant differences in relative diet contributions across scats (as identified using the two techniques separately) reflect passage rate differences between hard and soft digesta material and highlight certain hypothesized limitations in conventional morphological-based methods (e.g., differences in resistance to digestion, hard part regurgitation, partial and secondary prey consumption), as well as potential technical issues (e.g., resolution of primer efficiency and sensitivity, and scat subsampling protocols). DNA analysis of salmon occurrence (from scat soft part matrix and 238 archived salmon hard parts) provided species-level taxonomic resolution that could not be obtained by morphological identification, and showed that Steller sea lions were primarily consuming pink (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha) and chum (Oncorhynchus keta) salmon. Notably, DNA from Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) that likely originated from a distant fish farm was also detected in two scats from one site in the Eastern Aleutian Islands. Overall, molecular techniques are valuable for identifying prey in the fecal remains of marine predators. Combining DNA and hard part identification will effectively alleviate certain predicted biases, and will ultimately enhance measures of diet richness, fisheries interactions (especially salmon related ones) and the ecological role of pinnipeds and other marine predators, to the benefit of marine wildlife conservationist and fisheries managers.
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Metabolic costs of foraging and the management of O2 and CO2 stores in Steller sea lions.
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Fahlman, A., Svärd, C., Rosen, D.A.S., Jones, D.R. and Trites, A.W. 2008.
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Journal of Experimental Biology 211:3573-3580.
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abstract
The metabolic costs of foraging and the management of O2 stores during breath-hold diving was investigated in three female Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) trained to dive between 10 and 50 m (n=1142 dives). Each trial consisted of 2 to 8 dives separated by surface intervals (SI) that were determined by the sea lion (spontaneous trials) or by the researcher (conditioned trials). During conditioned trials, SI was long enough for O2 to return to pre-dive levels between each dive. The metabolic cost of each dive event (DMR = dive + surface interval) was measured using flow-through respirometry. The respiratory exchange ratio (VCO2 ·VCO2 -1) was significantly lower during spontaneous trials compared with conditioned trials. DMR was significantly higher during spontaneous trials and decreased exponentially with dive duration. A similar decrease in DMR was not as evident during conditioned trials. DMR could not be accurately estimated from the SI following individual dives that had short surface intervals (SI < 50 sec), but could be estimated on a dive by dive basis for longer SIs (SI > 50 sec). DMR decreased by 15%, but did not differ significantly from surface metabolic rates (MRS) when dive duration increased from 1 to 7 min. Overall, these data suggest that DMR is almost the same as MRS, and that Steller sea lions incur an O2 debt during spontaneous diving that is not repaid until the end of the dive bout. This has important consequences in differentiating between the actual and ‘apparent’ metabolic rate during diving, and may explain some of the metabolic differences reported between pinniped species.
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Buoyancy does not affect diving metabolism during shallow dives in Steller sea lions Eumetopias jubatus.
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Fahlman, A., G.D. Hastie, D.A.S. Rosen, Y. Naito and A.W. Trites. 2008.
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Aquatic Biology 3:147-154.
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abstract
hanges in buoyancy due to seasonal or abnormal changes in body composition are thought to significantly affect the energy budget of marine mammals through changes in diving costs. We assessed how changes in body composition might alter the foraging efficiency of Steller sea lions Eumetopias jubatus by artificially adjusting the buoyancy of trained individuals. PVC tubes were attached to harnesses worn by Steller sea lions that had been trained to feed at fixed depths (10 to 30 m) and to resurface inside a metabolic dome. Buoyancy was altered to simulate the naturally occurring differences in body composition reported in adult females (~12 to 26% subcutaneous fat). Diving characteristics (transit times and time at depth) and aerobic energy expenditure (gas exchange) were measured. We found that foraging cost decreased with the duration of the dive and increased with dive depth. However, changes in body composition did not affect the diving metabolic rate of Steller sea lions for dives between 10 and 30 m. We propose that Steller sea lions may adjust their diving lung volume to compensate for changes in buoyancy to avoid additional metabolic costs.
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Activity and diving metabolism correlate in Steller sea lion Eumetopias jubatus.
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Fahlman, A., R.Svärd,C. Wilson, D.A.S. Rosen and A.W. Trites. 2008.
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Aquatic Biology 2:75-84.
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abstract
Three Steller sea lions Eumetopias jubatus were trained to participate in free-swimming, open-ocean experiments designed to determine if activity can be used to estimate the energetic cost of finding prey at depth. Sea lions were trained to dive to fixed depths of 10 to 50 m, and to re-surface inside a floating dome to measure energy expenditure via gas exchange. A 3-axis accelerometer was attached to the sea lions during foraging. Acceleration data were used to determine the overall dynamic body acceleration (ODBA), a proxy for activity. Results showed that ODBA correlated well with the diving metabolic rate (dive + surface interval) and that the variability in the relationship (r2 = 0.47, linear regression including Sea lion as a random factor) was similar to that reported for other studies that used heart rate to estimate metabolic rate for sea lions swimming underwater in a 2 m deep water channel. A multivariate analysis suggested that both ODBA and dive
duration were important for predicting diving metabolic cost, but ODBA alone predicted foraging cost to within 7% between animals. Consequently,collecting 3-dimensional acceleration data is a simple technique to estimate field metabolic rate of wild Steller sea lions and other diving mammals and birds.
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A novel presence-only validation technique for improved Steller sea lion Eumetopias jubatus critical habitat descriptions.
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Gregr, E.J. and A.W. Trites. 2008.
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Marine Ecology Progress Series 365:247-261.
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abstract
We used published information about foraging behaviour, terrestrial
resting sites, bathymetry, and seasonal ocean climate to develop hypotheses relating
life history traits and physical variables to the at-sea habitat of a wide-ranging
marine predator, the Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus). We used the hypotheses
to develop a series of habitat models that predicted the probability of sea lions
occurring within 3 x 3 km2 grids overlaid on the Gulf of Alaska and Bering Sea; and
compared these deductive model predictions with opportunistic at-sea observations of
sea lions (presence-only data) using 1) a likelihood approach in a small area where
effort was assumed to be uniformly distributed, and 2) an adjusted skewness (Skadj)
test that evaluated the distribution of the predicted values associated with true
presence observations. We found the Skadj statistic was comparable to the likelihood
test when using pseudo-absence data, but it was more powerful for assessing the
relative performance of the different predictive spatial models. We also found that
the habitat maps we produced for adult female sea lions using the deductive
modelling approach captured a higher proportion of presence observations than the
current habitat model (Critical Habitat) used by fisheries managers since 1993 to
manage Steller sea lions. Such improved predictions of habitat are necessary to
effectively design, implement, and evaluate fishery mitigation measures. The
deductive approach we propose is suitable for modelling the habitat use of other
age- and sex- classes, and for integrating these age/sex class specific models into
a revised definition of Critical Habitat for Steller sea lions. It can also be
readily used to identify the at-sea habitat of other central place foragers.
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Steller sea lions show diet-dependent changes in body composition during nutritional stress and recover more easily from mass loss in winter than in summer.
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Jeanniard du Dot, T., Rosen, D. A. S. , Trites, A. W. 2008.
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Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 367(1):1-10.
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abstract
Controlled feeding experiments were undertaken with captive Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) to assess seasonal (winter vs. summer) physiological responses of individual animals to reduced quantities and qualities of food that are hypothesised to occur in the wild. Eight animals were randomly divided into two experimental groups fed isocaloric diets: Group H ate Pacific herring (Clupea pallasi) throughout the experiment while Group P was switched to walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) during a 28-day food restriction (after a 28-day baseline) and back to herring during a 28-day controlled re-feeding. Diet type did not impact the rates of body mass lost when food was restricted, but did influence the type of internal energy reserve (protein vs lipids) the sea lions predominantly used. In both summer and winter, Group H lost significantly more lipids and less lean mass than Group P that was fed pollock during the restriction phase. The response of Group H was consistent with the predicted pattern of nutritional stress physiology (i.e. protein sparing and utilization of lipid reserves). Group P lost a surprisingly high proportion of body protein while consuming restricted levels of pollock, which could lead to muscle impairment and vital organ failure on a long-term basis. When given increased amounts of herring during the controlled re-feeding phase, the capacity of both groups to compensate for the previous mass loss was found to depend on season and was independent of previous diet. All of the sea lions increased their rates of mass gain and returned to their pre-experimental weight during winter, but not during summer. Some intrinsic energetic plasticity related to seasonal adaptation to the environment may render winter an easier period than summer to recover from nutritional stress.
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A 4500-year time series of Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus) size and abundance: archaeology, regime shifts, and sustainable fisheries.
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Maschner, H. D. G., M. W. Betts, K. L. Reedy-Maschner and A. W. Trites. 2008.
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Fishery Bulletin 106:386-394.
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abstract
4500-year archaeological record of Pacific cod (Gadus macrocephalus) bones from Sanak Island, Alaska, was used to assess the sustainability of the modern fishery and the effects of this fishery on the size of fish caught. Allometric reconstructions of cod length for eight prehistoric time periods indicated that the current size of the near shore, commercially fished cod stocks is statistically unchanged from that of fish caught during 4500 years of subsistence harvesting. This finding indicates that the current Pacific cod fishery that uses selective harvesting technologies is a sustainable commercial fishery. Variation in relative cod abundances provides further insights into the response to punctuated changes in ocean climate (regime shifts) and suggests that Pacific cod stocks can recover from major environmental perturbations. Such palaeofisheries data can extend the short time-series of fisheries data (<50 y) that form the basis for fisheries management in the Gulf of Alaska and place current trends within the context of centennial- or millennial-scale patterns.
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Diets of mature male and female Steller sea lions differ and cannot be used as proxies for each other.
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Trites, A.W., and D.G. Calkins. 2008.
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Aquatic Mammals 34:25-34.
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abstract
Disturbance of otariid breeding sites (rookeries) to determine diet from
fecal remains (scats) could be eliminated if the diets of males using adjoining
bachelor haulouts could be used as a proxy for diets of breeding females. We
collected scats from sexually mature Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) at one
male resting site (haulout) and three female dominated breeding sites (rookeries) at
Forrester Island, Southeast Alaska (June-July, 1994–1999) to test whether the diets
of bachelor bulls differed from that of breeding females. Female diets were fairly
evenly distributed between gadids, salmon and small oily fishes (forage fish), and
contained lesser amounts of rockfish, flatfish, cephalopods and other fishes.
Female diet did not differ significantly between the 3 rookeries, but did differ
significantly from that of males. Males consumed significantly fewer salmon, and
more pollock, flatfish and rockfish compared to females. The males also consumed
larger pollock compared to females. These dietary differences may reflect a
sex-specific difference in foraging areas or differences in hunting abilities
related to the disparity in physical sizes of males and females. The similarity of
the female diets between rookeries suggests that female diets can be determined from
samples collected at a single site within a rookery complex. Unfortunately, summer
diets of breeding females cannot be ascertained from hard parts contained in the
scats of mature male Steller sea lions.
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Quantification of terrestrial haul-out and rookery characteristics of Steller sea lions.
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Ban, S. and A.W. Trites. 2007.
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Marine Mammal Science 23:496-507.
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abstract
Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus)are known to have occupied the same
terrestrial haul-out and rookery sites across the North Pacific rim for centuries,
but it is not known why they choose and stay at these locations, or what defines
their preferred habitat. Classifying and comparing the shoreline type of haulouts
and rookeries against sites not used by Steller sea lions showed that they
preferentially locate their haulouts and rookeries on exposed rocky shorelines and
wave-cut platforms. However, no preference was found for selecting rookeries on
sheltered shore-types. Shoreline types used less frequently by sea lions included
fine-to-medium-grained sand beaches, mixed sand and gravel beaches, gravel beaches,
and sheltered rocky shores. Quantifying the shoreline types used by sea lions confirms anecdotal reports of habitat preferences and may prove useful in
identifying and protecting sea lion terrestrial habitat, or in forecasting how
climate change might affect the distribution of sea lions.
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Turning maneuvers in Steller sea lions (Eumatopias jubatus).
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Cheneval, O., R. W. Blake, A. W. Trites and K. H. S. Chan. 2007.
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Marine Mammal Science 23:94-109.
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abstract
Steller sea lions are highly maneuverable marine mammals (expressed as minimum turning radius). Video recordings of turns (n=195) are analyzed from kinematic measurements for three captive animals. Speed-time plots of 180° turns have a typical ?V-shape?. The sea lions decelerated during the first half of the turn, reached a minimum speed in the middle of the curved trajectory and re-accelerated by adduction of the pectoral flippers. The initial deceleration was greater than that for passive gliding due to pectoral flipper braking and/or change in body contour from a stiff, straight streamlined form. Centripetal force and thrust were determined from the body acceleration. Most thrust was produced during the power phase of the pectoral flipper stroke cycle. Contrary to previous findings on otariids, little or no thrust was generated during initial abduction of the pectoral flippers and during the final drag-based paddling phase of the stroke cycle. Peak thrust force!
at the center of gravity occurs halfway through the power phase while the centripetal force is maximal at the beginning of the power stroke. Performance is modulated by changes in the duration and intensity of movements without changing their sequence. Turning radius, maximum velocity, maximum acceleration and turning duration were 0.3 body lengths, 3.5 m/s, 5 m/s2 and 1.6 s respectively. The relative maneuverability based on velocity and length specific minimum turning radius is comparable to other otariids, superior to cetaceans but inferior to many fish.
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Reductions in oxygen consumption during dives and estimated submergence limitations of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Hastie, G.D., D.A.S. Rosen and A.W. Trites. 2007.
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Marine Mammal Science 23:272-286.
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abstract
Accurate estimates of diving metabolic rate are central to assessing the energy
needs of marine mammals. To circumvent some of the limitations inherent with
conducting energy studies in both the wild and captivity, we measured diving
oxygen consumption of two trained Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in the open
ocean. The animals dived to predetermined depths (5–30 m) for controlled periods
of time (50–200 s). Rates of oxygen consumption were measured using open-circuit
respirometry before and after each dive. Mean resting rates of oxygen consumption
prior to the dives were 1.34 (±0.18) and 1.95 (±0.19) liter/min for individual sea
lions. Mean rates of oxygen consumption during the dives were 0.71 (±0.24) and
1.10 (±0.39) liter/min, respectively. Overall, rates of oxygen consumption during
dives were significantly lower (45% and 41%) than the corresponding rates measured
before dives. These results provide the first estimates of diving oxygen consumption
rate for Steller sea lions and show that this species can exhibit a marked decrease in
oxygen consumption relative to surface rates while submerged. This has important
consequences in the evaluation of physiological limitations associated with diving
such as dive duration and subsequent interpretations of diving behavior in the wild.
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Comparison of fatty acid profiles of spawning and non-spawning Pacific herring, Clupea harengus pallasi.
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Huynh, M.D., D.D. Kitts, C. Hu and A.W. Trites. 2007.
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Journal of Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology, Part B 146:504-511.
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abstract
Crude lipid and fatty acid composition from liver, intestine, roe, milt and flesh of spawning and non-spawning Pacific herring Clupea harengus pallasi were examined to determine the relative effects of spawning on the nutritional value of herring. Depletion of lipid due to spawning condition was significant (Pb0.01) in all organ tissues and flesh of spawning herring. The lipid content ranged from an average of 1.9 to 3.4% (wet weight basis) in different organ tissues of spawning herring, to 10.5 to 16% in non-spawning fish. The fatty acid profile exhibited many differences in the relative distribution of individual fatty acids among organ tissues and between the two fish groups. Oleic acid (C18:1n-9), a major monounsaturated fatty acid (MUFA) found in all tissue lipids, decreased significantly (Pb0.01) in spawning fish. The two monoenes, C20:1n-9 and C22:1n-11, occurred at high concentrations in the flesh but at only minor proportion in the digestive organs and gonads. Spawning herring also had significantly (Pb0.01) higher polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) content in the organ tissues, particularly in the milt and ovary, with docosahexaenoic acid (C22:6n-3, DHA) having the greatest proportion. Among the n-6 fatty acids, only C18:2n-6 and C20:4n-6 occurred at notable amounts and were present in higher proportions in spawning fish. We concluded that although relatively higher n-3 fatty acid content was found in the organ lipids of spawning herring, they are not an energy-dense prey food source due to the fact that both flesh and gonads contain a very low amount of lipid.
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Ecotypic variation and predatory behavior among killer whales (Orcinus orca) off the eastern Aleutian Islands, Alaska.
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Matkin, C., L.G. Barrett-Lennard, H.Yurk, D. Ellifrit, and A.W. Trites. 2007.
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Fishery Bulletin 105:74-87.
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abstract
From 2001 to 2004 in the eastern Aleutian Islands, Alaska, killer whales (Orcinus orca) were encountered 250 times during 421 days of surveys that covered a total of 22,491 miles. Three killer whale lineages (resident, transient, and offshore) were identified acoustically and genetically. Resident killer whales were found 12 times more frequently than transient killer whales, while offshore killer whales were only encountered once. A minimum of 901 photographically-identified resident whales used the region during our study. A total of 165 mammal-eating transient killer whales were identified, with the majority (70%) encountered during spring (May and June). The diet of transient killer whales in spring was primarily gray whales (Eschrichtius robustus), while northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) were primary prey in summer. Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) did not appear to be a preferred prey or major prey item during spring and summer. The majority of killer whales in the eastern Aleutian Islands are the resident ecotype, which do not consume marine mammals.
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Utilization of stored energy reserves during fasting varies by age and season in Steller sea lions.
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Rea, L.D., D.A.S. Rosen and A.W Trites. 2007.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 85:190-200.
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abstract
Nine captive Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus (Schreber, 1776),
1.75–6 years of age) were fasted for 7–14 d to test the effect of
short-term fasting on changes in body mass and body condition. Trials
were repeated during both the summer breeding season and the
nonbreeding season in seven animals to elucidate whether there was a
seasonal component to the ability of Steller sea lions to adapt to
limited food resources. Mean percent mass loss per day was higher
during the breeding season in juveniles (1.8% ± 0.2%·d–1) than in
subadults (1.2% ± 0.1%·d–1), but there were no significant age-related
differences during the nonbreeding season (juveniles, 1.5% ± 0.3%·d–1;
subadults, 1.7% ± 0.3%·d–1). A decrease in the rate of mass loss
occurred after the first 3 d of fasting only in subadults during the
breeding season. Percent total body lipid ranged from 11% to 28% of
total body mass at the initiation of fasting trials. Animals with lower
initial percent total body lipid exhibited higher subsequent rates of
mass loss and a lower percentage of tissue catabolism derived from
lipid reserves. There was no evidence of metabolic adaptation to
fasting in juveniles, which suggests that juvenile sea lions would be
more negatively impacted by food limitation during the breeding season
than would subadults.
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Impact of diet index selection and the digestion of prey hard remains on determining the diet of the Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Tollit, D.J., S.G. Heaslip, R.L. Barrick and A.W. Trites. 2007.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 85:1-15.
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abstract
Abstract: Nine prey species (n = 7,431) were fed to four captive female Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus (Schreber, 1776)) in eleven feeding trials over 75 days to investigate the effectiveness of different methods used to determine diet from prey hard remains. Trials aimed to replicate short (1-2 day) and long feeding bouts and consisted of single species and mixed daily diets. Overall, an average of 25.2% ± 22.2% (mean ± SD, range 0-83%) of otoliths were recovered, but recovery rates varied by species (ANOVA, P = 0.01) and were linearly related to otolith robustness (R2 = 0.88). Squid beaks were recovered at higher frequencies (mean = 96%) than the otoliths of all species. Enumerating both non-otolith skeletal structures and otoliths (together termed ?bones?) increased species recovery rates by twofold on average (P < 0.001), with increases up to 2.5 times for herring and 3-4 times for salmonids. Using bones reduced inter-specific differences (P = 0.08), but recovery !
varied among sea lions. Bones were distributed over more scats per meal (mean = 2.9 scats, range = 0-5) than otoliths (mean = 1.9 scats, range = 0-4). In three different 15-day mixed diet trials, biomass reconstruction (BR) indices performed better than frequency of occurrence indices in predicting diet fed. Applying our experimentally derived numerical correction factors (to account for species differences in complete prey digestion) further improved BR estimates, resulting in all twelve unweighted comparisons within 5% (for otoliths) and 12% (for bones) of the actual diet fed.
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Bottom-up forcing and the decline of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Alaska: assessing the ocean climate hypothesis.
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Trites, A. W., A. J. Miller, H. D. G. Maschner, M. A. Alexander, S. J. Bograd, J. A. Calder, A. Capotondi, K. O. Coyle, E. D. Lorenzo, B. P. Finney, E. J. Gregr, C. E. Grosch, S. R. Hare, G. L. Hunt, J. Jahncke, N. B. Kachel, H.-J. Kim, C. Ladd, N. J. Mantua, C. Marzban, W. Maslowski, R. Mendelssohn, D. J. Neilson, S. R. Okkonen, J. E. Overland, K. L. Reedy-Maschner, T. C. Royer, F. B. Schwing, J. X. L. Wang and A. J. Winship. 2007.
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Fisheries Oceanography 16:46-67.
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abstract
Declines of Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) populations in the Aleutian
Islands and Gulf of Alaska could be a consequence of physical oceanographic changes
associated with the 1976-77 climate regime shift. Changes in ocean climate are
hypothesized to have affected the quantity, quality and accessibility of prey,
which in turn may have affected the rates of birth and death of sea lions. Recent
studies of the spatial and temporal variations in the ocean climate system of
the North Pacific support this hypothesis. Ocean climate changes appear to have
created adaptive opportunities for various species that are preyed upon by Steller
sea lions at mid-trophic levels. The east-west asymmetry of the oceanic response
to climate forcing after 1976-77 is consistent with both the temporal aspect (populations
decreased after the late 1970's) and the spatial aspect of the decline (western,
but not eastern, sea lion populations decreased). These broad-scale climate variations
appear to be modulated by regionally sensitive biogeographic structures along
the Aleutian Islands and Gulf of Alaska, which include a transition point from
coastal to open-ocean conditions at Samalga Pass westward along the Aleutian Islands.
These transition points delineate distinct clusterings of different combinations
of prey species, which are in turn correlated with differential population sizes
and trajectories of Steller sea lions. Archaeological records spanning 4000 years
further indicate that sea lion populations have experienced major shifts in abundance
in the past. Shifts in ocean climate are the most parsimonious underlying explanation
for the broad suite of ecosystem changes that have been observed in the North
Pacific Ocean in recent decades.
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Killer whales, whaling and sequential megafaunal collapse in the North Pacific: a comparative analysis of the dynamics of marine mammals in Alaska and British Columbia following commercial whaling.
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Trites, A. W., V. B. Deecke, E. J. Gregr, J. K. B. Ford, and P. F. Olesiuk. 2007.
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Marine Mammal Science 23:751-765.
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abstract
The hypothesis that commercial whaling caused a sequential megafaunal collapse in the North Pacific Ocean by forcing killer whales to eat progressively smaller species of marine mammals is not supported by what is known about the biology of large whales, the ecology of killer whales and the patterns of ecosystem change that took place in Alaska, British Columbia, and elsewhere in the world following whaling. A comparative analysis shows that populations of seals, sea lions and sea otters increased in British Columbia following commercial whaling, unlike the declines noted in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands. The declines of seals and sea lions that began in western Alaska around 1977 were mirrored by increases in numbers of these species in British Columbia. A more likely explanation is the seal and sea lion declines and other ecosystem changes in Alaska stems from a major oceanic regime shift that occurred in 1977. Killer whales are unquestionably a significant predator of seals, sea lions and sea otters but not because of commercial whaling.
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Diets of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Southeast Alaska from 1993-1999.
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Trites, A.W., D.G Calkins and A.J. Winship. 2007.
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Fishery Bulletin 105:234-248.
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abstract
Diet of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) was determined from 1494 scats (feces) collected at breeding (rookeries) and non-breeding (haulout) sites in Southeast Alaska from 1993 to 1999. The most common prey of 61 species identified were walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma), Pacific herring (Clupea pallasii), Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus), Pacific salmon (Salmonidae), arrowtooth flounder (Atheresthes stomias), rockfish (Sebastes spp.), skates (Rajidae), and cephalopods (squid and octopus). Sea lion diets at the three Southeast Alaska rookeries differed significantly from one another. Steller sea lions consumed the most diverse range of prey categories during summer, and the least diverse during fall. Diet was more diverse in Southeast Alaska during the 1990s than in any other region of Alaska (Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands). Dietary differences between increasing and declining populations of sea lions in Alaska correlate with rates of population change, and add credence to the view that diet may have played a role in the decline of sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands.
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Relationship between Steller sea lion diets and fish distributions in the eastern North Pacific.
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Bredesen, E.L., A.P. Coombs, and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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In A.W. Trites, S. Atkinson, D.P. DeMaster, L.W. Fritz, T.S. Gelatt, L.D. Rea and K. Wynne (eds), Sea Lions of the World. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. pp. 131-139.
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abstract
Distributions of fish species were compared with diet information for Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) to assess the level of correspondence between potential prey availability and sea lion feeding habits. Fish distributions were compiled as part of the Sea Around Us Project at the UBC Fisheries Centre, and were based on published distributions and habitat preferences (e.g., latitude, depth). Sea lion scat samples were collected during the 1990s from seven geographic regions from Oregon to the western and central Aleutian Islands. The frequencies of occurrence of four prevalent species (walleye pollock, Theragra chalcogramma ; Pacific herring, Clupea pallasii ; Pacific cod, Gadus macrocephalus ; and North Pacific hake, Merluccius productus ) in the Steller sea lion diet were compared to their distributions in the North Pacific Ocean. The data suggest that Steller sea lion diets broadly reflect the distributions of these major prey species. However, some of the fish species that were regionally predicted to be present in high abundance were not proportionally reflected in the Steller sea lion diet, suggesting that other factors in addition to fish abundance influence their diets.
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The Sequential Megafaunal Collapse Hypothesis: Testing with Existing Data.
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DeMaster, D.P., A.W. Trites, P. Clapham, S. Mizroch, P. Wade, R.J. Small, and J. Ver Hoef. 2006.
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Progress in Oceanography 68:329-342.
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abstract
Springer et al. [Springer, A.M., Estes, J.A., van Vliet, G.B., Williams, T.M., Doak, D.F., Danner, E.M., Forney, K.A., Pfister, B., 2003. Sequential megafaunal collapse in the North Pacific Ocean: an ongoing legacy of industrial whaling? Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 100 (21), 12,223–12,228] hypothesized that great whales were an important prey resource for killer whales, and that the removal of fin and sperm whales by commercial whaling in the region of the Bering Sea/Aleutian Islands (BSAI) in the late 1960s and 1970s led to cascading trophic interactions that caused the sequential decline of populations of harbor seal, northern fur seal, Steller sea lion and northern sea otter. This hypothesis, referred to as the Sequential Megafaunal Collapse (SMC), has stirred considerable interest because of its implication for ecosystem-based management. The SMC has the following assumptions: (1) fin whales and sperm whales were important as prey species in the Bering Sea; (2) the biomass of all large whale species (i.e., North Pacific right, fin, humpback, gray, sperm, minke and bowhead whales) was in decline in the Bering Sea in the 1960s and early 1970s; and (3) pinniped declines in the 1970s and 1980s were sequential. We concluded that the available data are not consistent with the first two assumptions of the SMC. Statistical tests of the timing of the declines do not support the assumption that pinniped declines were sequential. We propose two alternative hypotheses for the declines that are more consistent with the available data. While it is plausible, from energetic arguments, for predation by killer whales to have been an important factor in the declines of one or more of the three populations of pinnipeds and the sea otter population in the BSAI region over the last 30 years, we hypothesize that the declines in pinniped populations in the BSAI can best be understood by invoking a multiple factor hypothesis that includes both bottom–up forcing (as indicated by evidence of nutritional stress in the western Steller sea lion population) and top–down forcing (e.g., predation by killer whales, mortality incidental to commercial fishing, directed harvests). Our second hypothesis is a modification of the top–down forcing mechanism (i.e., killer whale predation on one or more of the pinniped populations and the sea otter population is mediated via the recovery of the eastern North Pacific population of the gray whale). We remain skeptical about the proposed link between commercial whaling on fin and sperm whales, which ended in the mid-1960s, and the observed decline of populations of northern fur seal, harbor seal, and Steller sea lion some 15 years later.
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Ecosystem models show combined effects of fishing, predation, competition, and ocean productivity on Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Alaska.
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Guénette, S., S.J.J. Heymans, V. Christensen, and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 63:2495-2517.
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abstract
Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) increased in the eastern portion of their range while declining in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands from the late 1970s to late 1990s. We constructed ecosystem models of the central and western Aleutians and of Southeast Alaska to simultaneously evaluate four hypotheses explaining sea lion dynamics: killer whale (Orcinus orca) predation, ocean productivity, fisheries, and competition with other species. Comparisons of model predictions to historical time series data indicate that all four factors likely contributed to the trends observed in sea lion numbers in both ecosystems. Changes in ocean productivity conveyed by the Pacific Decadal Oscillation influenced the abundance trajectory of several species. Fishing could have affected the ecosystem structure by influencing the abundance of Atka mackerel (Pleurogrammus monopterygius) in the Aleutians, and herring (Clupea pallasii) in Southeast Alaska. Halibut (Hypoglossus stenolepis) in the Aleutians and arrowtooth flounder (Reinhardtius stomias) in Southeast Alaska appear to impede sea lion population growth through competitive interactions. Predation by killer whales was important when sea lions were less abundant in the 1990s in the Aleutians and in the 1960s in Southeast Alaska, but appear to have little effect when sea lion numbers were high.
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Studying trained Steller sea lions in the open ocean.
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Hastie, G, D.A.S. Rosen, and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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In A.W. Trites, S. Atkinson, D.P. DeMaster, L.W. Fritz, T.S. Gelatt, L.D. Rea and K. Wynne (eds), Sea Lions of the World. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. pp. 193-204.
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abstract
The costs associated with diving are a central component of a sea lions? energy budget. Accurate estimates of diving costs are needed to assess energetic and physiological constraints on foraging behavior, including the potential effects of changes in prey distribution or density. However, information on sea lion diving physiology is limited to relatively few species of pinnipeds, and there is currently no information for Steller sea lions. Information on diving energetics of pinnipeds has traditionally been gathered using either wild or captive animals. However, studies with wild animals are logistically challenging and are limited by the opportunistic nature of data collection, whilst studies in captivity have been constrained by the physical restrictions of the holding facility. To circumvent some of these limitations, we combined the best aspects of both techniques by conducting diving metabolism studies with trained Steller sea lions in an open ocean environment. Two captive-reared Steller sea lions were housed in a holding pen and transported by boat to a diving trial area. The animals were trained to dive to predetermined depths for controlled periods of time using an underwater light targeting system and a video system to monitor behavior. At the end of each dive the sea lions returned to a respirometry dome on the surface where oxygen consumption was measured to estimate diving metabolism. This paper describes the experimental setup used to evaluate diving metabolism, discusses the logistical challenges of the study and the advantages of using such an approach to carry out physiological experiments with sea lions, and provides preliminary data on the diving energetics of Steller sea lions.
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The influence of depth on a breath-hold diver: predicting the diving metabolism of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Hastie, G.D, D.A.S. Rosen, A.W. Trites. 2006.
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Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 336:163-170.
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abstract
Diving animals must endeavor to increase their dive depths and prolong the time they spend exploiting resources at depth. Results from captive and wild studies suggest that many diving animals extend their foraging bouts by decreasing their metabolisms while submerged. We measured metabolic rates of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) trained to dive to depth in the open ocean to investigate the relationships between diving behaviour and the energetic costs of diving. We also constructed a general linear model to predict the oxygen consumption of sea lions diving in the wild. The resultant model suggests that mean swimming distance and depth of dives significantly influence the oxygen consumption of diving Steller sea lions. The predictive power of the model was tested using a cross-validation approach, whereby models reconstructed using data from pairs of sea lions were found to accurately predict the oxygen consumption of the third diving animal. Predict!
ed oxygen consumption during dives to depth ranged from 3.37 L min-1 at 10 meters, to 1.40 L min-1 at 300 meters over a standardized swimming distance of 600 meters. This equated to an estimated metabolic rate of 97.54 and 40.52 MJ day-1, and an estimated daily feeding requirement of 18.92 and 7.96 kg day-1 for dives between 10 and 300 meters, respectively. The model thereby provides information on the potential energetic consequences that alterations in foraging strategies due to changes in prey availability could have on wild populations of sea lions.
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Using simulations to evaluate reconstructions of sea lion diet from scat.
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Joy, R., D.J. Tollit, J.L. Laake, and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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In A.W. Trites, S. Atkinson, D.P. DeMaster, L.W. Fritz, T.S. Gelatt, L.D. Rea and K. Wynne (eds), Sea Lions of the World. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. pp. 205-222.
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abstract
Models used to describe pinniped diet can provide very different composition estimates. Occurrence indices as well as biomass reconstruction models (which use estimates of the number and sizes of prey consumed) are commonly used and increasingly utilize a variety of fish hard remains (bones) found in scats. However, the importance of any single fish can be overestimated if its bones are deposited in a succession of scats assumed to be from different fish. Similarly, the importance of a species will be underestimated relative to other species if the bones of one species are more fragile and are completely digested or if bones from different fish of the same species are contained in a single scat and assumed to be from a single fish. Species differences in the proportion of fish bones that survive digestion can be assessed from captive feeding studies where the number and species of prey consumed is known. Numerical correction factors can be calculated to take into account the levels of complete digestion. We performed computer simulations using data from captive feeding studies to investigate levels and sources of error in reconstructing simulated mixed species diets. Our simulations used different combinations of hard remains, were conducted both with and without the application of numerical correction factors, and compared four different diet indices (1. Modified frequency of occurrence, 2. Split sample frequency of occurrence, 3. Variable biomass reconstruction, 4. Fixed biomass reconstruction). Simulations indicated that levels of error were related to the MNI method of inferring fish numbers from prey remains, prey size, the number of identifiable prey structures used, and the robustness of the remains to digestive processes (recovery rate). The fewer fish fed, the higher the relative probability of counting the fish, particularly when a multiple element structure or all structure techniques are used. If recovery rates were assumed to be consistent across species, then large fish (particularly when fed in small amounts) were overestimated relative to smaller sized prey in all models, but particularly biomass reconstruction models and when using more than one paired structure. When recovery rates of a paired structure (otoliths) were varied across species (as observed in captive feeding studies) then biomass models tended to overestimate the species with high recovery rates. In contrast, frequency of occurrence models overestimated the contribution of smaller prey (particularly when fed in small amounts). Simulations also indicated correction factors can reduce levels of error in biomass reconstruction models, but cannot solve problems related to counting fish using MNI. Our work shows simulations can form a valuable component in assessing diet indices and the level (and direction) of associated errors in each.
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Mapping world-wide distributions of marine mammal species using a relative environmental suitability (RES) model.
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Kaschner, K., R. Watson, A. W. Trites and D. Pauly. 2006.
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Marine Ecology Progress Series 316:285-310.
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abstract
The lack of comprehensive sighting data sets precludes the application of standard habitat suitability modeling approaches to predict distributions of the majority of marine mammal species on very large scales. As an alternative, we developed an ecological niche model to map global distributions of 115 cetacean and pinniped species living in the marine environment using more readily available expert knowledge about habitat usage. We started by assigning each species to broad-scale niche categories with respect to depth, sea-surface temperature, and ice edge association based on synopses of published information. Within a global information system framework and a global grid of 0.5° latitude/longitude cell dimensions, we then generated an index of the relative environmental suitability(RES) of each cell for a given species by relating known habitat usage to local environmental conditions. RES predictions closely matched published maximum ranges for most species, thu!
s representing useful, more objective alternatives to existing sketched distributional outlines. In addition, raster-based predictions provided detailed information about heterogeneous patterns of potentially suitable habitat for species throughout their range. We tested RES model outputs for 11 species (northern fur seal, harbor porpoise, sperm whale, killer whale, hourglass dolphin, fin whale, humpback whale, blue whale, Antarctic minke, and dwarf minke whales) from a broad taxonomic and geographic range, using data from dedicated surveys. Observed encounter rates and species-specific predicted environmental suitability were significantly and positively correlated for all but 1 species. In comparison, encounter rates were correlated with <1% of 1000 simulated random data sets for all but 2 species. Mapping of large-scale marine mammal distributions using this environmental envelope model is helpful for evaluating current assumptions and knowledge about species? occurrence!
s, especially for data-poor species. Moreover, RES modeling can help to focus research efforts on smaller geographic scales and usefully supplement other, statistical, habitat suitability models.
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A review of the potential effects of disturbance on sea lions: assessing response and recovery.
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Kucey, L., and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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In A.W. Trites, S. Atkinson, D.P. DeMaster, L.W. Fritz, T.S. Gelatt, L.D. Rea and K. Wynne (eds), Sea Lions of the World. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. pp. 581-589.
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abstract
Human intrusion within areas of sea lion habitat is increasing worldwide, leading to concerns about disruption of distribution and daily activities of sea lions. Sea lion responses to disturbance can be quantified by recording changes in behavioural patterns, documenting numbers of animals on shore before, during and after the disturbance, or by measuring physiological stress of individual animals. However, assessing recovery is not so straightforward, as highlighted by an example from a study of the short-term effects of disturbance on Steller sea lions. Recovery is generally recognized as a return to an original state or normal condition, but is often operationally defined as a percent-return to pre-disturbance numbers or behaviours. Simple interpretation of disturbance effects can be easily confounded by concurrent natural seasonal changes in behaviours or haulout patterns, or by daily variability in numbers that can be attributed to weather, tidal cycle stage and other factors. Overall, a range of recovery criteria needs to be simultaneously applied when assessing the effects of human disturbance on sea lion populations. Insights gained from research on the effects of disturbance on Steller sea lions may help guide the development of studies undertaken on other species of sea lions.
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Body mass and composition responses to short-term low energy intake are seasonally dependent in Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Kumagai, S., D.A.S Rosen and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 179:589-598.
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abstract
Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) were fed restricted iso-caloric amounts of Pacific herring
(Clupea pallasi) or walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) for 8-9 days, four times over the
course of a year to investigate effects of season and prey composition on sea lion physiology. At
these levels, the sea lions lost body mass at a significantly higher rate during winter (1.6 ± 0.14
kg d-1), and at a lower rate during summer (1.2 ± 0.32 kg d-1). Decreases in body fat mass and
standard metabolic rates during the trials were similar throughout the seasons and for both diet
types. The majority of the body mass that was lost when eating pollock derived from decreases
in lipid mass, while a greater proportion of the mass lost when eating herring derived from
decreases in lean tissue, except in the summer when the pattern was reversed. Metabolic
depression was not observed during all trials despite the constant loss of body mass. Our study
supports the hypothesis that restricted energy intake may be more critical to Steller sea lions in
the winter months, and that the type of prey consumed (e.g., herring or pollock) may have
seasonally-specific effects on body mass and composition.
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Potential effects of short-term prey changes on sea lion physiology.
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Rosen, D.A., D.J. Tollit, A.J. Winship, and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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In A.W. Trites, S. Atkinson, D.P. DeMaster, L.W. Fritz, T.S. Gelatt, L.D. Rea and K. Wynne (eds), Sea Lions of the World. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. pp. 103-116.
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abstract
hanges in the proximate composition of prey can result in a nutritional imbalance in individual
animals, regardless of total energy intake. This mechanism has been hypothesized to have
contributed to the decline of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus). Yet little is known about how
otariids react physiologically to short-term changes in prey quality and availability. A series of
studies with young captive Steller sea lions tested several potential links between prey quality
and sea lion health. Body composition (fat to total mass ratio) of animals fed constant,
maintenance-level, isocaloric diets of high- or low-lipid prey changed with season, but overall
was not aff ected by prey composition. The sea lions appeared to prioritize maintaining core
growth rates even when energy was limited, electing to deplete lipid reserves to fulfi ll energy
defi cits, resulting in changes in relative body condition. In contrast, sea lions subject to short-
term, sub-maintenance diets of high- or low-lipid prey utilized a greater portion of their lipid
reserves when losing body mass on low lipid prey. Experiments with diff erent ad libitum
feeding regimes indicated that sea lions are readily able to alter food intake levels to
compensate for diff erences in prey energy content and, to a lesser degree, prey availability.
However, the results also suggest that decreases in prey quality and/or foraging opportunities
can readily combine to require food intake levels that are greater than the digestive capacity of
the individual. This is particularly true for young animals that may already be living ?on the
edge? energetically.
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Changes in diet and maternal attendance of a South American sea lions indicate changes in the marine environment and the abundance of prey.
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Soto, K., A.W. Trites, and M. Arias-Schreiber. 2006.
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Marine Ecology Progress Series 312:277-290.
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abstract
Behavioural observations were made of South American sea lions Otaria flavescens in Peru to determine whether changes in their diet and maternal attendance patterns reflected physical changes in the marine environment and alterations in the abundance and distribution of prey. The study was conducted during the breeding season between 1998 and 2002, which was a period that encompassed a strong El Niño (1997–1998) and a moderate La Niña (1999–2001). Observations revealed strong linkages between maternal attendance patterns and the abundance of prey and oceanographic features close to the rookeries. Acute prey shortage during El Niño resulted in females increasing the length of their foraging trips and decreasing the time they spent onshore with their pups. In contrast, shorter times at sea and longer times onshore were observed during the favourable conditions of La Niña when preferred prey (anchovy and squat lobster) were more abundant near the rookeries. Pup mortalities increased when females spent more time at sea searching for prey and did not return frequently enough to nurse their pups. A larger diversity of prey species (particularly of demersal fishes) was consumed during El Niño when anchovy and lobster were less available. Females appeared to adjust their diets and maternal attendance patterns in response to annual changes in the abundance and distribution of prey. These observations suggested that diet and maternal responses reflect interannual fluctuations of the unpredictable Peruvian upwelling ecosystem, and implied that South American sea lions may be good indicators of relative changes in the distribution and abundance of marine resources.
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Estimating diet composition in sea lions: which technique to choose?
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Tollit, D.J., S.G. Heaslip, B.E. Deagle, S.J. Iverson, R. Joy, D.A.S. Rosen and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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In A.W. Trites, S. Atkinson, D.P. DeMaster, L.W. Fritz, T.S. Gelatt, L.D. Rea and K. Wynne (eds), Sea Lions of the World. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. pp. 293-307.
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abstract
Accurate estimates of diets are vital to monitor impacts of sea lion populations on their ecosystems, their interactions with fisheries and to understand the role of food to animal nutrition and health. Approaches include using: (1) prey remnants in stomach contents, spews and scats, (2) prey DNA in scats (3) fatty acid signatures in blubber and (4) stable isotope ratios in predator's tissue. Each methodology has particular advantages and limitations, many of which can be assessed and improved through controlled captive feeding trials. Analysis of prey remnants from captive sea lion scats have shown significant variability in digestion between and within prey species, which coupled with preferential regurgitation and enumeration biases, can confound accurate diet quantification, but does not prevent spatial or temporal comparisons. Correction for partial digestion and use of additional structures besides otoliths can provide accurate prey size estimates. Prey DNA can be reliably isolated from soft remains in scats from captive sea lions and with further development this approach may allow quantification of diet. Genetic methods can be expensive and representative of only one to two days foraging (like prey remnant analysis), but may be less affected by differential digestion and can identify prey in scats that could not be identified through structural remnants. Validation of fatty acid signature analysis to quantify diet at longer temporal scales in sea lions is ongoing, but this new technique promises to be particularly useful to assess biases in traditional methods, identify the onset of weaning and to highlight what prey most contribute to lipid reserves. Stable isotope analysis of predator tissues gives only trophic level data, but can provide data on diet changes on many temporal scales. Remote video monitoring of foraging events and lavage/enema techniques can provide valuable diet information, but, like many newer techniques, animal capture is required. Ideally a suite of techniques should be used to study diet. While methods and correction factors developed for Steller sea lions can likely be applied to the other five sea lion species, they should be verified experimentally.
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Insights into the Timing of Weaning and the Attendance Patterns of Lactating Steller Sea Lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Alaska During Winter, Spring and Summer.
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Trites, A.W., B.P. Porter, V.B. Deecke, A.P. Coombs, M.L. Marcotte and D.A.S. Rosen. 2006.
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Aquatic Mammals 32:85-97.
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abstract
Behavioral observations of lactating Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) and their offspring were recorded at 4 haulout sites in Alaska to determine: 1) whether sea lions wean during winter while they are 7-9 months old, and 2) whether sea lions using sites in the Gulf of Alaska (the declining endangered population) made longer foraging trips than sea lions in Southeast Alaska (where the population appeared larger and healthier). Longer foraging trips are commonly thought to be an indicator of nutritional stress. Eight sets of behavioral observations were made using focal and scan sampling techniques at haulouts over 4 years (1995-1998) during 3 seasons (winter, spring and summer). Counter to expectations, we found no significant differences between haulout populations in the time that lactating Steller sea lions spent at sea or on shore. This suggests that sea lions did not have more difficulty capturing prey from winter through summer in the area of decline compared to where sea lion numbers increased. However, lactating Steller sea lions in both regions made longer foraging trips in winter than they did in spring and summer. These changes in foraging patterns between seasons were consistent among all years and sites. The proportion of time that immature Steller sea lions suckled declined through the spring to early summer, suggesting that sea lions began supplementing their milk diet with solid food in the spring. We did not observe any sea lions weaning during winter. Rather, most appeared to wean at the start of the breeding season when they were 1 or 2 y old. Sea lions observed in Southeast Alaska during the late 1990s while population growth was slowing suggest that most males weaned at 2 y, and that about 50% of females weaned at 1 y and the remainder at 2 y.
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Sea Lions of the World.
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Trites, A.W., S. Atkinson, D.P. DeMaster, L.W. Fritz, T.S. Gelatt, L.D. Rea, and K. Wynne (eds). 2006.
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Alaska Sea Grant Alaska College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. 664 pages
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abstract
The goal of the symposium was to bring together scientists and resource
managers to address knowledge of world sea lion populations in order
to compare them with Steller sea lions, and to identify research needs.
managers to address knowledge of world sea lion populations in order
to compare them with Steller sea lions, and to identify research needs.
Changes in the worldwide abundance of sea lions is of growing concern to fisheries and conservation groups, because fisheries are feared
to threaten sea lions, and/or because sea lions are feared to threaten
fisheries. Over the past few decades, major changes have been noted in
the abundance of all five species of sea lions around the world. In the
North Pacific, the Steller sea lion has been declared endangered in parts
of its range and is considered threatened with extinction in others. This
is in contrast to the rapid increase in populations of California sea lions
in Mexico and California. Elsewhere, the Japanese subspecies of the California sea lion is probably extinct and the Galapagos subspecies is in low
numbers. Numbers of New Zealand sea lions and Australian sea lions are
also extremely low, with major declines recently reported in Australia.
Relatively little is known about the South American sea lion.
This symposium brought the world community of sea lion researchers and policy makers together to share their experiences and knowledge
with each other. Interspecies comparisons can shed light on why some
populations might decline while others increase. Insights might also be
gained on whether trends in the abundance of sea lions are related to
fishing activities through food dependencies or more directly through
control or conservation measures. A better understanding of the biology
of sea lions is urgently needed. The symposium significantly contributed
to the understanding of fluctuating sea lion populations, especially as
they compare to the Steller sea lion, by synthesizing current knowledge
and forging new directions.
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Effects of fisheries on ecosystems: just another top predator?
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Trites, A.W., V. Christensen and D. Pauly. 2006.
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In I.L. Boyd, K. Camphuysen and S. Wanless (eds), Top predators in marine ecosystems: their role in monitoring and management. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. pp. 11-27.
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abstract
Apex predators such as pinnipeds, cetaceans, seabirds and sharks, are constrained by the sizes of prey they can consume and thus typically feed within a narrow range of trophic levels. Having co-evolved with their prey, they have influenced the behaviors, physiologies, morphologies and life history strategies of the species they target. In contrast, humans can consume prey of any size from all trophic levels using methods that can rapidly deplete populations. On an ecological time scale, fisheries, like apex predators, can directly affect the abundance of other species by consuming, or out-competing them; or they can indirectly affect the abundance of non-targeted species by removing other predators. However, there is growing evidence that the effects of fisheries go well beyond those imposed by apex predators. Theory and recent observations confirm that the continued development and expansion of fisheries over the past half century has led to a decrease in the!
size and life spans of targeted species, with reproduction of fish occurring at earlier ages and at smaller sizes. Also, high levels of fishing have altered the makeup of many ecosystems, depressing the average trophic level of heavily fished ecosystems and speeding up the rate of nutrient turnover within them. An inevitable consequence of fishing down the food web is increased ecosystem instability, unsustainable fisheries and an inability for the ecosystem to support healthy abundant populations of apex predators.
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Food consumption by sea lions: existing data and techniques.
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Winship, A.J., A.M.J. Hunter, D.A.S. Rosen, and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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In A.W. Trites, S. Atkinson, D.P. DeMaster, L.W. Fritz, T.S. Gelatt, L.D. Rea and K. Wynne (eds), Sea Lions of the World. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, University of Alaska, Fairbanks. pp. 177-191.
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abstract
Knowing the quantity of prey that sea lions consume is a prerequisite for assessing the role of sea lions in aquatic ecosystems and the potential for competition to occur with fisheries. We reviewed the different approaches that have been used to estimate the food requirements for the six species of sea lions. We reviewed data on the quantity of food consumed by sea lions in captivity, and examined how consumption varied by species, body size, and season. We also reviewed and quantified available information on the energetics of sea lions and assessed the potential application of these data to parameterize an existing bioenergetic model that was developed to estimate the food requirements of Steller sea lions. Our study provided ranges of estimates of food consumption for sea lions that can be used in various modeling strategies to assess the impact of sea lions on prey populations, including commercially exploited fish species. The approaches reviewed in our study shared common difficulties arising from the quantity and quality of data, and the integration of data across scales and species. Our modeling exercise, in particular, identified the major uncertainties involved in estimating the food requirements of each sea lion species using an energetics approach. Our results provide direction for future research aimed at improving the accuracy and comparability of estimates of food consumption for sea lions.
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Risk of extirpation of Steller sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands: a population viability analysis based on alternative hypotheses for why sea lions declined in western Alaska.
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Winship, A.J., and A.W. Trites. 2006.
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Marine Mammal Science 22(1):124-155.
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abstract
We estimated the risk that the Steller sea lion will be extirpated in western
Alaska using a population viability analysis (PVA) that combined simulations with
statistically fitted models of historical population dynamics. Our analysis considered
the roles that density-dependent and density-independent factors may have played
in the past, and how they might influence future population dynamics. It also
established functional relationships between population size, population growth
rate and the risk of extinction under alternative hypotheses about population
regulation and environmental variability. These functional relationships can be
used to develop recovery criteria and guide research and management decisions.
Life table parameters (e.g., birth and survival rates) operating during the population
decline (1978?2002) were estimated by fitting simple age-structured models to
time-series of pup and non-pup counts from 33 rookeries (subpopulations). The
PVA was carried out by projecting all 33 subpopulations into the future using
these estimated site-specific life tables (with associated uncertainties) and
different assumptions about carrying capacities and the presence or absence of
density-dependent population regulation. Results suggest that the overall predicted
risk of extirpation of Stelsler sea lions as a species in western Alaska was low
in the next 100 yr under all scenarios explored. However, most subpopulations
of Steller sea lions had high probabilities of going extinct within the next 100
yr if trends observed during the 1990s were to continue. Two clusters of contiguous
subpopulations occurring in the Unimak Pass area in the western Gulf of Alaska/eastern
Aleutian Islands and the Seguam?Adak region in the central Aleutian Islands had
relatively lower risks of extinction. Risks of extinction for a number of subpopulations
in the Gulf of Alaska were reduced if the increases observed since the late 1990s
continue into the fu ture. The risks of subpopulations going extinct were small
whe n densit ydependent compensation in birth and survival rates were assumed,
even when random stochasticity in these vital rates was introduced.
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Infectious disease and the decline of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Alaska: insights from serology data.
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Burek, K.A., F.M.D. Gulland, G. Sheffield, K.B. Beckman, E. Keyes, T.R. Spraker, A.W. Smith, D.E. Skilling, J.E. Evermann, J.L. Stott, J.T. Saliki and A.W. Trites. 2005.
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Journal of Wildlife Diseases 41(3):512-524.
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abstract
Serology data were examined to determine whether infectious disease may have
played a role in the decline of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus)
in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian Islands. Available published data, historical
unpublished data, and recent collections (1997-2000) were compared and reviewed.
Data was stratified by geography in order to compare the declining western
Alaska population in the Aleutian Islands regions through eastern Prince William
Sound to the increasing population in Southeast Alaska. Prevalences
of antibodies from the 1970s to early 1990s were noted for Leptospira
interrogans, Chlamydophila psittaci, Brucella spp., phocid herpesvirus 1, and canine parvovirus. Serum samples collected
and analyzed from 1997?2000 were tested for antibodies to these agents as
well as to caliciviruses, marine mammal morbilliviruses, and canine adenoviruses
1 and 2. Conclusions could not be drawn about changes in the prevalence
of exposure to disease agents during the decline of Steller sea lions because
data were not comparable either because of inconsistencies in test techniques,
or because the samples were either not collected in all decades from all regions
or were not tested for antibodies to the same disease agents in different
decades. Despite these shortcomings, the available data contained no
convincing evidence of significant exposure of Steller sea lions to morbilliviruses,
B. spp., canine parvovirus or
L. interrogans. Steller
sea lions have been exposed to a phocid herpesvirus, caliciviruses, canine
adenovirus, and C. psittaci
or to cross reactive organisms in regions of both increasing and decreasing
sea lion abundance. These disease agents are not likely to have been
the primary cause of the decline because they are found at comparable levels
in both the increasing and the decreasing populations. However they
may have contributed to the decline or impeded recovery of the Steller sea
lion population due to undetected mortality and morbidity, or reduction of
fecundity and body condition in animals under other stresses. Systematic
monitoring for disease agents and their effects is needed to determine whether
infectious disease is currently playing a role in the decline and lack of
recovery of Steller sea lions.
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Molecular scatology as a tool to study diet: analysis of prey DNA in scats from captive Steller sea lions.
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Deagle, B.E., D.J. Tollit, S.N. Jarman, M.A. Hindell, A.W. Trites and N.J. Gales. 2005.
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Molecular Ecology 14:1831-1842.
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abstract
The DNA of prey present in animal scats may provide a valuable source of information for dietary studies. We conducted a captive feeding trial to test whether prey DNA could be reliably detected in scat samples from Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus). Two sea lions were fed a diet of fish (five species) and squid (one species), and DNA was extracted from the soft component of collected scats. Most of the DNA obtained came from the predator, but prey DNA could be amplified using prey-specific primers. The four prey species fed in consistent daily proportions throughout the trial were detected in more than 90% of the scat DNA extractions. Squid and sockeye salmon, which were fed as a relatively small percentage of the daily diet, were detected as reliably as the more abundant diet items. Prey detection was erratic in scats collected when the daily diet was fed in two meals that differed in prey composition, suggesting that prey DNA is passed in meal specific puls!
es. Prey items that were removed from the diet following one day of feeding were only detected in scats collected within 48 hours of ingestion. Proportions of fish DNA present in eight scat samples (evaluated through the screening of clone libraries) was roughly proportional to the mass of prey items consumed, raising the possibility that DNA quantification methods could provide semi-quantitative diet composition data. This study should be of broad interest to researchers studying diet since it highlights an approach that can accurately identify prey species and is not dependent on prey hard parts surviving digestion.
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The dielectric properties of the cranial skin of five young captive Stellar sea sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) and a similar number of young domestic pigs (Sus scrofa) and sheep (Ovis aries) between 0.1 and 10 GHz.
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Olawale, K.O., R.J. Petrell, D.G. Michelson and A.W. Trites. 2005.
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Physiological Measurement 26:626-637.
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abstract
To aid in the development of a long-range subcutaneous radio frequency identification tag to monitor the fate sea lion pups, the dielectric properties of the cranial skin of young female otariids, and possible test subjects of similar size and age, or pigs (Sus scrofa) and sheep (Ovis aries)were obtained over a frequency range of 0.1 to 10 GHz at the base of their heads where the tag will be implanted. The resulting curves were similar in shape to adult human skin data, but the values were generally lower. Between ubjects, variations were noted in all the species. Circuitry for the RF-ID tag is being designed to account for antenna detuning as a result of the lossy media or skin and he variation in dielectric properties.
keywords Keywords: dielectric constant, dielectric loss, skin thickness,
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Examining the potential for nutritional stress in young Steller sea lions: physiological effects of prey composition.
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Rosen, D.A.S. and A.W. Trites. 2005.
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Journal of Comparative Physiology 175:265-273.
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abstract
The effects of high- and low-lipid prey on the body mass, body condition, and
metabolic rates of young captive Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus)
were examined to better understand how changes in prey composition might impact
the physiology and health of wild sea lions and contribute to their population
decline. Results of three feeding experiments suggest that prey lipid content
did not significantly affect body mass or relative body condition (lipid mass
as a percent of total mass) when sea lions could consume sufficient prey to meet
their energy needs. However, when energy intake was insufficient to meet daily
requirements, sea lions lost more lipid mass (9.16±1.80 kg±SE) consuming
low-lipid prey compared with eating high-lipid prey (6.52±1.65 kg). Similarly,
the sea lions lost 2.7±0.9 kg of lipid mass while consuming oil-supplemented
pollock at maintenance energy levels but gained 5.2±2.7 kg lipid mass while
consuming identical energetic levels of herring. Contrary to expectations, there
was a 9.7±1.8% increase in metabolism during mass loss on submaintenance
diets. Relative body condition decreased only 3.7±3.8% during periods of
imposed nutritional stress, despite a 10.4±4.8% decrease in body mass.
These findings raise questions regarding the efficacy of measures of relative
body condition to detect such changes in nutritional status among wild animals.
The results of these three experiments suggest that prey composition can have
additional effects on sea lion energy stores beyond the direct effects of insufficient
energy intake.
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Dietary analysis from fecal samples: how many scats are enough?
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Trites, A.W. and Joy, R. 2005.
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Journal of Mammalogy 86(4):704-712.
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abstract
Diets of mammals are increasingly being inferred from identification of hard parts from prey eaten and recovered in fecal remains (scats). Frequencies with which particular prey species occur among collections of scats are easily compiled to describe the average diet, and can be used to compare diets between and within geographic regions, and across years and seasons. Important to these analyses is the question of statistical power. In other words, how many scats should be collected to compare the diet among and between species? We addressed this problem using Monte Carlo simulations to analytically determine the consequence of sample size on the dietary analysis of scats using frequency of occurrence methods. We considered two questions: 1) how is the statistical power affected by sample size; and 2) what is the likelihood of not identifying a prey species? We randomly sampled predetermined numbers of scats (n=10–200) from computer-generated populations of scats containing prey of known species and frequencies of occurrences. We also randomly sampled a large database of field-collected scats from Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus). We then used standard contingency table tests such as chi-square and Fisher’s exact test to determine whether differences between our samples and populations were statistically significant. We found a minimum size of 59 scats is necessary to identify principal prey remains occurring in >5% of scats. However, 94 samples are required when comparing diets to distinguish moderate effect sizes over time or between areas. These findings have significant implications for the interpretation of published dietary data, as well as for the design of future scat-based dietary studies for pinnipeds and other species.
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Validation of a fecal glucocorticoid assay for Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Hunt, K.E., A.W. Trites, and S.K. Wasser. 2004.
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Physiology and Behavior 80:595-601.
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abstract
The Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus) is listed as endangered in
parts of its range and is suspected of suffering from ecological stressors that
may be reflected by fecal glucocorticoid hormones. We validated a fecal glucocorticoid
assay for this species with an adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) challenge. Feces
were collected from captive Steller sea lions (two males and two females) for
2 days before injection with ACTH, and for 4 or more days postinjection. Feces
were freeze-dried, extracted with a methanol vortex method, and assayed for glucocorticoids.
The assay demonstrated good parallelism and accuracy. All animals showed the expected
peak of fecal glucocorticoid excretion after ACTH injection. However, the two
males had higher baselines, higher peaks, and more delayed peaks than the females.
Peak glucocorticoid excretion occurred at 5 and 28 h postinjection for the two
females, and at 71 and 98 h for the two males. Correction for recoveries by the
addition of tritiated hormones produced ACTH profiles that were virtually identical
in pattern to uncorrected data, but with higher within-sample coefficients of
variation. Based on these results, we conclude that this fecal glucocorticoid
assay accurately reflects endogenous adrenal activity of Steller sea lions, and
that recovery corrections are not necessary for this species when using the methanol
vortex extraction method. More research is needed to address possible sex differences
and other possible influences on fecal glucocorticoid concentrations.
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Season variation in nutrient composition of Alaskan walleye pollock.
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Kitts, D. D., Huynhl,M. D., Hu, C. and Trites, A.W. 2004.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 82:1408-1415.
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abstract
A popular hypothesis for the noted steady decline in the population of Steller sea lions in the regions from Prince William Sound through the Aleutian Islands relates to their nutritional status. Sea lion diets appear to have shifted from primarily small schooling fatty fishes to low fat fish such as walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma). We examined the seasonal changes in proximate nutrients of pollock collected in the Bering Sea. Mean energy density (dry-weight) of pollock peaked in October then declined and remained low throughout winter. Energy recovery occurred in the summer months with strong recovery observed in female fish caught in July. Contrary to whole fish carcass energy contents, both total protein and moisture contents were at their highest levels in winter (January) when total crude lipid content was at its lowest (p<0.05). This trend gradually declined to its lowest levels in the fall, when lipid content was high. The decline in total lipi!
ds during winter seasons appeared to parallel gonad development during the pre-spawning period. Sex differences in energy densities were not found. Nor did proximate analysis data for moisture, protein, ash and lipid content show any significant variation between males and females. Protein digestibility of pollock was higher (p<0.05) in the summer than in the spring, but not different for winter or fall seasons. We conclude that the nutrient content of pollock may have some impact on the Steller sea lions that feed on them, particularly the energetic value that appears to be low during important feeding periods for this marine mammal.
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Suckling attempts during winter by two non-filial Steller sea lion pups (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Porter, B.T. and Trites, A.W. 2004.
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Mammalia 63:23-26.
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abstract
Milk stealing and fostering care is rare among mammals. Among pinnipeds, the nursing of offspring that are not their own has been noted for some species of seals, but rarely for sea lions or fur seals. Thousands of hours have been spent observing Steller sea lions in the wild, but only a few successful suckling attempts have been noted. From January to March 1996, we observed two non-filial pups repeatedly suckling lactating females at a winter haulout site at Timbered Island in southeast Alaska. These two observations are noteworthy because of their rarity and the bearing they have on the poorly understood process of weaning in Steller sea lions. The timing of weaning in Steller sea lions has been speculated to occur sometime during winter or spring when pups are 6 months or older. Both mothers and pups we observed were aggressive toward intruding conspecifics and were very protective of their mother’s teats. However, there was a range of individual variation in the tolerance of both mature females and their offspring to the distance they would allow strange pups near the teats. It is undoubtedly advantageous for nutritionally stressed pups to attempt to steal milk, compared with the alternative — starvation. However the potential for injury likely out-weighs any gain in resources and probably deters most young from attempting to approach strange females. The pups we observed stealing milk did not supplement their intake with fish despite the apparent ability of this age group to capture prey. The fact that they did not suggests that they may not have been behaviourally or physiologically capable of consuming fish. Compared with milk, they may also not be physically capable of consuming enough prey to meet their daily energy needs during this period of rapid growth and development. This further suggests that weaning of Steller sea lions pups may occur much later in spring or early summer than many have previously thought.
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The effects of prey availability on pup mortality and the timing of birth of South American sea lions (Otaria flavescens) in Peru.
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Soto, K., A.W. Trites, and M. Arias-Schreiber. 2004.
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Journal of Zoology 264:419-428.
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abstract
Pup mortality and the timing of birth of South American sea lions Otaria flavescens were investigated to determine the possible relationship between fluctuations in prey availability in the Peruvian upwelling ecosystem and current and future reproductive success of sea lions during six consecutive breeding seasons. Our study from 1997 to 2002 encompassed the strongest El Nino on record and one La Nina event. Pup mortality ranged from 13% before El Nino to 100% during El Nino, and was negatively correlated with prey availability. Abortions were also more frequent when prey availability was low. However, pup mortality remained high following El Ni~no due to the punctuated short-term effects it had on population dynamics and subsequent maternal behaviour. Births occurred later in the season after years of low food availability and earlier following years of high food availability. The peak of pupping coincided with the peak of mortality in all years, and may have !
been the product of intensive competition between bulls at the peak of the breeding season. The stronger and more frequent El Ninos that appear to be occurring along the Peruvian coast may produce significant stochastic changes in future births and pup mortality, which may place the vulnerable South American sea lion population in Peru at greater risk.
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Sizes of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) consumed by the eastern stock of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Southeast Alaska from 1994-1999.
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Tollit, D.J., Heaslip, S.G. and Trites, A.W. 2004.
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Fishery Bulletin 102(3):522-532.
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abstract
Lengths of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) consumed by Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) were estimated using allometric regressions applied to seven diagnostic cranial structures recovered from 531 scats collected in Southeast Alaska between 1994-1999. Selected structural measurements were corrected for loss of size due to erosion using experimentally derived condition-specific digestion correction factors. Correcting for digestion increased the estimated length of fish consumed by 23%, and the average mass of fish consumed by 88%. Mean corrected fork length (FL) of pollock consumed was 42.4 11.6 cm (range=10.0-78.1 cm, n=909). Adult pollock (>45.0 cm FL) occurred more frequently in scats collected from rookeries along the open ocean coastline of Southeast Alaska during June and July (74% adults, mean FL=48.4 cm) than they did in scats from haulouts located in inside waters between October and May (51% adults, mean FL=38.4 cm). Overall, the contribution of juvenile pollock (20 cm) to the sea lion diet was insignificant, while adults contributed 44% to the diet by number and 74% by mass. On average, larger pollock were eaten in summer at rookeries throughout Southeast Alaska than at rookeries in the Gulf of Alaska or the Bering Sea. Overall it appears that Steller sea lions are capable of consuming a wide size range of pollock, with the bulk of fish falling between 20-60 cm. The use of cranial hard parts other than otoliths and the application of digestion correction factors are fundamental to correctly estimating the sizes of prey consumed by sea lions and for determining their overlap with commercial fisheries.
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A method to improve size estimates of walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma) and Atka mackerel (Pleurogrammus monopterygius) consumed by pinnipeds: digestion correction factors applied to bones and otoliths recovered in scats.
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Tollit, D.J., Heaslip, S.G., Zeppelin, T.K., Joy, R., Call, K.A. and Trites, A.W. 2004.
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Fishery Bulletin 102(3):498-508.
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abstract
The lengths of otoliths and other skeletal structures recovered from the scats of pinnipeds, such as Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus), correlate with body size and can be used to estimate the length of prey consumed. Unfortunately, otoliths are often found in too few numbers or are too digested to usefully estimate prey size. Techniques are therefore required to account for the degree of digestion of alternative diagnostic bones prior to estimating prey size. We developed a method (using defined criteria and photo-reference material) to assign the degree of digestion for key cranial structures of two prey species (walleye pollock, Theragra chalcogramma and Atka mackerel, Pleurogrammus monopterygius). The method grades each structure into one of three condition categories; good, fair or poor. We also conducted captive feeding trials to determine the extent of erosion and derive condition-specific digestion correction factors to reconstruct the original sizes of the structures consumed. In general, larger structures were relatively more digested than smaller ones. Mean size reduction varied between different types of structures (3.3-26.3%), but was not influenced by the size of the prey consumed. Results from the observations and experiments were combined to reconstruct the size of prey consumed by sea lions and other pinnipeds. The proposed method has four steps: 1) measure the recovered structures and grade the extent of digestion using defined criteria and photo-reference collection; 2) exclude structures graded in poor condition; 3) multiply measurements of structures in good and fair condition by their appropriate digestion correction factors to derive their original size; and 4) calculate the size of prey from allometric regressions relating corrected structure measurements to body lengths. This technique can be readily applied to piscivore dietary studies that use fish hard remains.
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Possible effects of pollock and herring on the growth and reproductive success of Steller sea lions: insights from feeding experiments using an alternative animal model, Rattus novegicus.
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Donnelly, C.P., A.W. Trites and D.D. Kitts. 2003.
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British Journal of Nutrition 89:71-82.
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abstract
The decline of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in the Gulf of Alaska appears to have been associated with a switch of diet
from one dominated by fatty forage fishes (such as her-ring; Clupea pallasi ) to one dominated by low-fat fish (such as pollock; Theragra
chalco-gramma). Observations made during the decline include reduced body size of sea lions, low pregnancy rates, and high mortality. We used the general mammalian model, the laboratory rat (Rattus norvegicus ), to test whether changing the quality of prey consumed could cause changes in size and reproductive performance. Five groups of twelve fiale, weanling rats were fed diets composed of herring (H), pollock (P), pollock suppliented with herring oil (PH), pollock suppliented with pollock oil (PP), or a sii-purified diet (ICN). Mean body weights were greatest for H, followed by PH, P, PP and finally ICN, although ICN was the only group significantly different from the others (P 0·05). Food intakes before mating were 10 % higher for groups on the lower-fat diets (P and ICN), resulting in similar energy intakes in all groups. The protein efficiency ratio was highest for the H diet, slightly lower for all pollock diets, and significantly lower for ICN (P 0·05). The fetal weights for mothers fed P were significantly reduced (P 0·05). The present study shows that the energy content was a major limiting factor in the nutritional quality of pollock. When food intake was adjusted to meet energetic requirients, there were no detrimental consequences from eating pollock. However, supplientation of pollock meal with additional pollock oil may reduce growth and reproductive performance, although the reasons for this were not apparent.
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Maternal attendance patterns of lactating Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) from a stable and a declining population in Alaska.
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Milette, L.L. and A.W. Trites. 2003.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 81:340-348.
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abstract
Maternal attendance patterns of Alaskan Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) were compared during the summer breeding seasons in 1994 and 1995 at Sugarloaf Island (a declining population) and Lowrie Island (a stable population). Our goal was to determine whether there were differences in maternal attendance between the two populations that were consistent with the hypothesis that lactating Steller sea lions in the area of decline were food-limited during summer. Our a priori expectations were based on well-documented behavioural responses of otariids to reduced prey availability. We found that foraging trips were significantly shorter in the area of population decline, counter to initial predictions. The mean length of foraging trips in the declining area was 19.5 h compared with 24.9 h in the stable area. In contrast, the mean perinatal period (time between parturition and first feeding trip) was significantly longer in the area of decline (9.9 versus 7.9 days), again countering initial predictions. The mean length of shore visits for the declining population was also significantly longer (27.0 h compared with 22.6 h where the population was stable). For both populations, the mean time that mothers foraged increased as pups grew older, whereas the time that they spent on shore with their pups became shorter. Behavioural observations of maternal attendance patterns are inconsistent with the hypothesis that lactating Steller sea lions from the declining population had difficulty obtaining prey during summer.
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No evidence for bioenergetic interaction between digestion and thermoregulation in Steller sea lions, Eumetopias jubatus.
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Rosen, D.A.S. and A.W. Trites. 2003.
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Physiological and Biochemical Zoology 76(6):899-906.
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abstract
The increase in metabolism during digestion—the heat increment
of feeding—is often regarded as an energetic waste product.
However, it has been suggested that this energy could offset
thermoregulatory costs in cold environments. We investigated
this possibility by measuring the rate of oxygen consumption
of four juvenile Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) before
and after they ingested a meal in water temperatures of 2-8 degrees C. Rates
of oxygen consumption of fasted and fed animals increased in parallel with decreasing
water temperature, such
that the apparent heat increment of feeding did not change
with water temperature. These results suggest that Steller sea
lions did not use the heat released during digestion to offset
thermoregulatory costs.
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Quantifying errors associated with using prey skeletal structures from fecal samples to determine the diet of the Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Tollit, D.J., M. Wong, A.J. Winship, D.A.S. Rosen and A.W. Trites. 2003.
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Marine Mammal Science pp. 724-744.
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abstract
We examined the digestion and passage times of bones and other hard parts from
pollock, herring, salmon, and sandlance recovered from two juvenile captive
Steller's sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) subjected to varying
activity
levels. Key
bones that could be identified to species were distributed over an average of
3.2
scats (range 1–6) following a single meal, with pollock remains occurring
in
significantly more scats than other species. Relying on otoliths alone to determine
the presence of prey resulted in significantly fewer prey being identified than
if other structures were also used (such as vertebrae, jaw bones, and teeth),
particularly for salmon. Using either technique, there were significant differences
in the likelihood that bones would be recovered from the series of scats produced
following a meal, with pollock recovery exceeding herring (by three-fold) and
sandlance (by eight-fold). Differences between species were reduced when recovery
was calculated on a per scat basis rather than over multiple scats. Active animals
passed greater numbers of bones, but the overall effect on prey recovery estimates
was not significant. Defecation times of prey structures from a meal were variable
and ranged from an initial 2–56 h to a final 28–148 h. The time interval
to pass
95% of recovered structures varied by a factor of two among prey species, and
was highest for pollock due to retention beyond 65 h.
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Food webs in the ocean: who eats whom, and how much?
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Trites, A.W. 2003.
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In M. Sinclair and G. Valdimarsson (eds), Responsible Fisheries in the Marine Ecosystem. FAO, Rome and CABI Publishing, Wallingford. pp. 125-143.
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abstract
Over 100 food webs have been published for marine cosystems to describe the transfer of food energy from its source in plants,through herbivores,to carnivores and higher order predators.The webs suggest that the lengths of the chains that form food webs are typically short (3 –4 links),and that ecosystems with long food chains may be less stable than those with shorter food chains.
Stomach contents have been the primary means for determining what marine organisms eat.More recently developed techniques include faecal analysis and fatty acid signatures from blood or fat samples. Consumption has been estimated from the volume of food found in stomachs,from the feeding rates of captive individuals and from bioenergetic modelling.Consumption of marine organisms,expressed as a percentage of an individual ’s body weight per day,ranges from about 4 –15% or zooplankton,to 1 –4% for cephalopods,1 –2%for fish,3 –5% or marine mammals and 15 –20%for sea birds.Immature age classes consume about twice as much (per unit of body weight)as do mature individuals. Furthermore,consumption is not constant throughout the year,but varies with seasonal periods of growth and reproduction.Most groups of species consume 3 –10 times more than they produce,and export or pass up the food web about 70 –95%of their production. Marine organisms tend to be larger at successive trophic levels and are limited in the sizes of food they can consume. Humans are one of the few species that can prey uponalmost any level of the food chain and any size of prey.
Food web analysis and estimates of consumption are essential for understanding which ecosystems can support additional species,and which may be less stable and susceptible to species loss through the synergistic effects of fishing or culling.They are also critical tools for understanding changes in ecosystem dynamics as highlighted by a case study from the eastern Bering Sea.
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The decline of Steller sea lions in Alaska: A review of the nutritional stress hypothesis.
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Trites, A.W. and C.P. Donnelly. 2003.
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Mammal Review 33:3-28.
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abstract
1. The decline of Steller sea lions Eumetopias jubatus in the Gulf of Alaska and Aleutian
Islands between the late 1970s and 1990s may have been related to reduced availability of
suitable prey. Many studies have shown that pinnipeds and other mammals suffering from
nutritional stress typically exhibit reduced body size, reduced productivity, high mortality of
pups and juveniles, altered blood chemistry and specific behavioural modifications.
2. Morphometric measurements of Steller sea lions through the 1970s and 1980s
in Alaska indicate reduced body size. Reduced numbers of pups born and an apparent
increase in
juvenile mortality rates also appear to be nutritionally based. Blood chemistry
analyses have further shown that Steller sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska and
Aleutian Islands area exhibited
signs of an acute phase reaction, or immune reaction, in response to unidentified
physical and/or environmental stress. Behavioural studies during the 1990s
have not noted any changes
that are indicative of an overall shortage in the quantity of prey available
to lactating female sea lions.
3. The data collected in Alaska are consistent with the hypothesis that Steller
sea lions in the declining regions were nutritionally compromised because
of the relative quality of prey
available to them (chronic nutritional stress), rather than because of
the overall quantity of fish per se (acute nutritional stress). This is further
supported by captive studies that indicate
the overall quality of prey that has been available to Steller sea lions
in the declining popu-lation could compromise the health of Steller sea lions
and hinder their recovery.
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Prey consumption of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) off Alaska: how much prey do they require?
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Winship, A.J. and A.W. Trites. 2003.
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Fishery Bulletin 101:147-163.
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abstract
The effects of seasonal and
regional differences in diet composition
on the food requirements of Steller sea
lions (Eumetopias jubatus)were estimated by using a bioenergetic
model. The model considered differences in
the energy density of the prey, and differences in digestive effciency and the
heat increment of feeding of different
diets. The model predicted that Steller
sea lions in southeast Alaska required
45–60% more food per day in early
spring (March) than after the breeding season in late summer (August)
because of seasonal changes in the
energy density of the diets (along with
seasonal changes in energy require
ments).The southeast Alaska population,at 23,000 (±1660 SD)animals (all
ages), consumed an estimated 140,000
(±27,800) of prey in 1998. In contrast,
we estimated that the 51,000 (±3680)
animals making up the western Alaska
population in the Gulf of Alaska and
Aleutian Islands consumed just over
twice this amount (303,000 [±57,500 ]
t). In terms of biomass removed in 1998
from Alaskan waters,we estimated
that Steller sea lions accounted for
about 5% of the natural mortality of
gadids (pollock and cod) and up to 75%
of the natural mortality of hexagram
mids (adult Atka mackerel).These two
groups of species were consumed in
higher amounts than any other.The
predicted average daily food require
ment per individual ranged from 16
(±2.8)to 20 (±3.6)kg (all ages com
bined). Per capita food requirements
differed by as much as 24% between
regions of Alaska depending on the rel
ative amounts of low–energy-density
prey (e.g.gadids)versus high–energy
density prey (e.g. forage fish and
salmon)consumed. Estimated require
ments were highest in regions where
Steller sea lions consumed higher
proportions of low—energy-density prey
and experienced the highest rates of
population decline.
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Ecological effects of regime shifts in the Bering Sea and eastern North Pacific Ocean.
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Benson, A.J. and A.W. Trites. 2002.
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Fish and Fisheries 3:95-113.
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abstract
Large-scale shifts occurred in climatic and oceanic conditions in 1925, 1947, 1977, 1989 and possibly 1998. These shifts affected the mix and abundance of suites of coexisting species during each period of relative environmental stability- from primary producers to apex predators. However, the 1989 regime shift was not a simple reversal of the 1977 shift. The regime shifts occurred abruptly and were neither random variations nor simple reversals to the previous conditions. Timing of these anomalous environmental events in the North Pacific Ocean appears to be linked to physical and biological responses in other oceanic regions of the world. Changes in the atmospheric pressure can alter wind patterns that affect oceanic circulation and physical properties such as salinity and depth of the thermocline. This, in turn, affects primary and secondary production. Data from the North Pacific indicate that regime shifts can have opposite effects on species living in different domains, or can affect similar species living within a single domain in opposite ways. Climatic forcing appears to indirectly affect fish and marine mammal populations through changes in the distribution and abundance of their predators and prey. Effects of regime shifts on marine ecosystems are also manifested faster at lower trophic levels. Natural variability in the productivity of fish stocks in association with regime shifts indicates that new approaches to managing fisheries should incorporate climatic as well as fisheries effects.
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Classifying prey hard part structures recovered from fecal remains of captive Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Cottrell, P.E. and A.W. Trites. 2002.
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Marine Mammal Science 18:525-539.
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abstract
Feces were collected from six Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) that consumed known amounts of Atka mackerel (Pleurogrammus monopterygius), Pacific herring (Clupea harengus), pink salmon (Oncorhynchus gorbuscha), walleye pollock (Theragra chalcogramma), and squid (Loligo opalacens). The goal was to determine the numbers and types of taxon-specific hard parts that pass through the digestive tract and to develop correction factors for certain abundantly occurring structures. Over 20,000 fish and squid were consumed during 267 d of fecal collection. During this period, over 119,000 taxon-specific hard parts, representing 56 different structures, were recovered. Skeletal structures and non-skeletal structures accounted for 72% and 28% of all hard parts respectively. The branchiocranium, axial skeleton, and dermocranium regions of the skeletal system accounted for the greatest number of hard parts recovered. Over 70% of all recovered hard parts were represented by one to six taxa specific structures for each prey type. The average number of hard parts (3.1-3.12) and structure types (2.0-17.7) recovered per individual prey varied across taxa and were used to derive correction factors (to reconstruct original prey numbers). A measure of the variability of hard part recovery among sea lions showed no difference for certain herring, pollock, and squid structures, however, there was a significant difference for salmon and Atka mackerel structures. Identifying all taxon-specific prey hard parts increases the likelihood of identifying and estimating the number of prey consumed.
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Diets of fin, sei and sperm whales in British Columbia: an analysis of commercial whaling records, 1963-1967.
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Flinn, R.D., A.W. Trites, E.J. Gregr and I. Perry. 2002.
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Marine Mammal Science 18:663-679.
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abstract
Diets of fin (Balaenoptera physalus), sei (Balaenoptera borealis), and sperm whales (Physeter macrocephalus) were estimated from the stomach contents of individuals killed along the British Columbia coast from 1963 to 1967. The dominant prey types of fin whales were euphausiids, with minor contributions from copepods and fish. Sei whale stomachs contained primarily copepods in three years, whereas euphausiids or a variety of fish dominated the diet in the other two years. Sperm whales consumed primarily North Pacific giant squid (Moroteuthis robusta), but secondary prey differed between males and females. Female sperm whales frequently consumed ragfish (Icosteus spp.) and other fish, whereas the male diet also contained rockfish (Sebastes spp.). The high abundance of euphausiids along the British Columbia coast likely contributed to the presence of a summer resident population of fin whales. The high abundance of large copepods farther north probably influenced the migration of sei whales through the offshore waters of British Columbia. Sperm whale stomach contents differed by sex reflecting location and possibly breeding behaviors.
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Changes in metabolism in response to fasting and food restriction in the Steller sea lion (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Rosen, D.A.S. and A.W. Trites. 2002.
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Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology. 132:389-399.
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abstract
Many animals lower their resting metabolism (metabolic depression) when fasting or consuming inadequate food. We sought to document this response by subjecting five Steller sea lions to periods of:
(1) complete fasting; or
(2) restricting them to 50% of their normal herring diet. The sea lions lost an average of 1.5% of their initial body mass per day (2.30 kg y d )during the 9 –14-day fast, and their resting metabolic rates decreased 31%, which is typical of a ‘fasting response ’.
However, metabolic depression did not occur during the 28-day food restriction trials,despite the loss of 0.30% of body mass per day (0.42 kg y d). This difference in response suggests that undernutrition caused by reduced food intake may stimulate a ‘hunger response ’, which in turn might lead to increased foraging effort. The progressive changes in metabolism we observed during the fasts were related to, but were not directly caused by, changes in body mass from control levels. Combining these results with data collected from experiments when Steller sea lions were losing mass on low energy squid and pollock diets reveals a strong relationship between relative changes in body mass and relative changes in resting metabolism across experimental conditions.While metabolic depression caused by fasting or consuming large amounts of low energy food reduced the direct costs from resting metabolism, it was insufficient to completely overcome the incurred energy deficit.
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Cost of transport in Steller sea lions, Eumetopias jubatus.
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Rosen, D.A.S. and A.W. Trites. 2002.
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Marine Mammal Science 18:513-524.
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abstract
The cost of swimming is a key component in the energy budgets of marine mammals.
Unfortunately, data to derive predictive allometric equations are limited, and
estimates exist for only one other species of otariid. Our study measured the
oxygen consumption of three juvenile Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) swimming
in a flume tank at velocities up to 2.2 m sec-1. Minimum
measured cost of transport ranged from 3.5-5.3 J kg-1, m-1,
and was reached at swimming speeds of 1.7-2.1 m s-1. These
cost-of-transport values are higher than those reported for other marine mammals.
However, once differences in stationary metabolic rate were accounted for, the
locomotor costs (LC) for the Steller sea lions were commensurate with those of
other marine mammals. Locomotor costs (LC in J m-1) appeared
to be directly proportional to body mass (M in kg) such that LC = 1.651M1.01.
These estimates for the cost of locomotion can be incorporated into bioenergetic
models and used to determine the energetic consequences of observed swimming
behavior in wild marine mammals.
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Predator-prey relationships.
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Trites, A.W. 2002.
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In W.F. Perrin, B. Wursig and H.G.M. Thewissen (eds), Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals. Academic Press, San Diego. pp. 994-997.
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abstract
Marine mammal predator-prey interactions occur over different spatial and temporal scales, making it difficult to empirically decipher the influences they have on one another and on their ecosystems. However, their coexistence suggests that marine mammal predators and their prey have had profound influences on each other’s behaviors, physiologies, morphologies, and life history strategies. The diversity of niches filled by marine mammals makes if difficult to generalize about the evolutionary consequences of their interactions with prey, beyond stating the obvious: marine mammals have adapted to catch food, while their prey have adapted to avoid being caught.
On the shorter ecological time scale, marine mammals can affect the abundance of other species by consuming or out-competing them. They can also indirectly affect the abundance of nontargeted species by consuming one of their predators, and can have strong impacts on the overall dynamics and structure of their ecosystems. One of the best tools for understanding marine mammal predator-prey interactions is the ecosystem model. However, more work is required through experimental manipulations and observational studies to evaluate the choices made by marine mammals and the costs of obtaining different species of prey.
keywords predation
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Attendance patterns of Steller sea (Eumetopias jubatus) lions and their young during winter.
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Trites, A.W. and B.T. Porter. 2002.
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Journal of Zoology, London Vol 256
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abstract
Winter attendance patterns of lactating Steller sea lions Eumetopias jubatus and their offspring were recorded during the late stages of nursing when the young were expected to move milk to independent foraging. Trip duration and nursing visits to shore by 24 mothers with pups (7-9 months old) and six mothers with yearlings (19-21 months old) were noted during 600h of observations (from 22 January to 1 April 1996) at a non-breeding haulout site in south-eastern Alaska. Pups and yearlings tended to stay on or near the haulout while their mothers were away and showed no signs of weaning during winter. Their average trips to sea were 43% shorter in duration than those of lactating females, suggesting that pups and yearlings make independent trips away from the haulout while their mothers forage. The winter attendance cycle of lactating females (consisting of one trip to sea and one visit on land) averaged about 3 days, with the mothers of pups spending an average of 15h of this time onshore with their offspring. The winter attendance cycle of pups and yearlings averaged just over 2 days, with the immature sea lions spending an average of 22h on shore. Foraging trips by mothers of yearlings were significantly longer than those by mothers of pups. However, there was no significant difference in the foraging times of mothers of male and female pups. Lactating females spent more time at sea during winter than during summer. The probability of sighting an individual on the winter haulout during daylight hours was 15% for lactating females and 40% for immature animals.
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Behavioural responses of killer whales (Ornicus orca) to whale-watching: opportunistic observations and experimental approaches.
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Williams, R., A.W. Trites and D.E. Bain. 2002.
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Journal of Zoology, London. 256:255-270.
|
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abstract
Johnstone Strait provides important summer habitat for the northern resident
killer whales Orcinus orca of
British Columbia. The site is also an active whale-watching area. A voluntary
code of conduct requests
that boats do not approach whales closer than 100 m to address perceived, rather
than demonstrated,
effects of boat traffic on killer whales. The purpose of the study was to
test the relevance of this distance
guideline. Relationships between boat traffic and whale behaviour were studied
in 1995 and 1996 by shore-based the odolite tracking of 25 identifiable focal
animals from the population of 209 whales. Individual
killer whales were repeatedly tracked in the absence of boats and during approaches
by a 5.2 m motorboat
that paralleled each whale at 100 m. In addition, whales were tracked opportunistically,
when no effort was
made to manipulate boat traffc. Dive times, swim speeds, and surface-active
behaviours such as breaching
and spy-hopping were recorded. On average, male killer whales swam significantly
faster than females.
Whales responded to experimental approaches by adopting a less predictable path
than observed during
the preceding, no-boat period, although males and females used subtly different
avoidance tactics. Females
responded by swimming faster and increasing the angle between successive dives,
whereas males
maintained their speed and chose a smooth, but less direct, path. Canonical correlations
between whale
behaviour and vessel proximity are consistent with these conclusions, which suggest
that weakening whale-watching guidelines, or not enforcing them, would result
in higher levels of disturbance. High variability in
whale behaviour underscores the importance of large sample size and extensive
experimentation when
assessing the impacts of human activity on killer whales.
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Behavioral responses of male killer whales to a ‘leapfrogging’ vessel.
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Williams, R.M., D.E. Bain, J.K.B. Ford and A.W. Trites. 2002.
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Journal of Cetacean Research 4:305-310.
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abstract
The research and whalewatching communities of Johnstone Strait, British Columbia,
Canada have worked closely together to identify
whalewatching practices that minimise disturbance to northern resident killer
whales. Local guidelines request that boaters approach whales
no closer than 100m. Additionally, boaters are requested not to speed up when
close to whales in order to place their boat in a whale’s
predicted path: a practice known as ‘leapfrogging’. A land-based
study was designed to test for behavioural responses of killer whales to
an experimental vessel that leapfrogged a whale’s predicted path at distances
greater than 100m. Ten male killer whales were repeatedly
approached and the animals responded on average by adopting paths that were significantly
less smooth and less straight than during
preceding, control conditions. This adoption of a less ‘predictable’ path
is consistent with animals attempting to evade the approaching boat,
which may have negative energetic consequences for killer whales. The results
support local consensus that leapfrogging is a disruptive
style of whalewatching, and should be discouraged. Similarly, as the experimental
boat increased speed to overtake the whale’s path, the
source level of engine noise increased by 14dB. Assuming a standard spherical
transmission loss model, the fast-moving boat would need
to be 500m from the whale for the received sound level to be the same as that
received from a slow-moving boat at 100m. Whalewatching
guidelines should therefore encourage boaters to slow down around whales, and
not to resume full speed while whales are within
500m.
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A bioenergetic model for estimating the food requirements of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in Alaska.
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Winship, A.J., A.W. Trites and D.A.S. Rosen. 2002.
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Marine Ecology Progress Series 229:291-312.
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abstract
A generalized bioenergetic model was used to estimate the food requirements of
Steller
sea lions <i>Eumetopias jubatus</i> in Alaska, USA. Inputs included
age and sex-specific
energy require-ments
by date, population size and composition, and diet composition and energy content.
Error in
model predictions was calculated using uncertainty in parameter values and Monte
Carlo simulation
methods. Our model suggests that energy requirements of individuals were generally
lowest in the
summer breeding season (June to August) and highest in the winter (December to
February) and
spring (March to May) mainly due to changes in activity budgets. Predicted relative
daily food
requirements were highest for young animals (12 ± 3% SD and 13 ± 3%
of body mass for 1 yr old
males and females respectively) and decreased with age (5 ± 1% and 6 ± 1%
of body mass for 14 yr
old males and 22 yr old females respectively). The mean daily food requirement
of pregnant females
predicted by the model was only marginally greater than the predicted mean daily
food requirement
of non-pregnant females of the same age. However, the model suggested that the
mean daily food
requirement of females nursing pups was about 70% greater than females of the
same age without
pups. Of the 3 sets of model parameters (diet, population, and bioenergetic),
uncertainty in diet and
bioenergetic parameters resulted in the largest variation in model predictions.
The model provides a
quantitative estimate of the Steller sea lion population’s food requirements
and also suggests directions
for future research.
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Predictions of critical habitat for five whale species in the waters of coastal British Columbia.
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Gregr, E.J. and A.W Trites. 2001.
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Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 58:1265-1285.
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abstract
Whaling records from British Columbia coastal whaling stations reliably report
the positions of 9592 whales
killed between 1948 and 1967. We used this positional information and oceanographic
data (bathymetry, temperature,
and salinity) to predict critical habitat off the coast of British Columbia for
sperm (Physeter macrocephalus), sei
(Balaenoptera borealis), fin (Balaenoptera physalus), humpback (Megaptera
novaeangliae),
and blue (Balaenoptera
musculus) whales. We used generalized linear models at annual and monthly time
scales to relate whale occurrence to
six predictor variables (month, depth, slope, depth class, and sea surface temperature
and salinity). The models showed
critical habitat for sei, fin, and male sperm whales along the continental slope
and over a large area off the northwest
coast of Vancouver Island. Habitat models for blue, humpback, and female sperm
whales were relatively insensitive to
the predictor variables, owing partially to the smaller sample sizes for these
groups. The habitat predictions lend sup-port
to recent hypotheses about sperm whale breeding off British Columbia and identify
humpback whale habitat in
sheltered bays and straits throughout the coast. The habitat models also provide
insights about the nature of the link-ages
between the environment and the distribution of whales in the North Pacific Ocean.
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Marine mammal trophic levels and interactions.
|
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Trites, Andrew W. 2001.
|
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In J. Steele, S. Thorpe and K. Turekian (eds), Encyclopedia of Ocean Sciences. Academic Press, London, UK. pp. 1628-1633.
|
|
abstract
Calculating trophic levels is necessary first step to quantifying and understanding trophic interactions between marine mammals and other species in marine ecosystems. This can be achieved using dietary information collected from stomachs and scats, or by measuring isotopic ratios contained in marine mammal tissues. These data indicate that marine mammals occupy a wide range of trophic levels beginning with dugong and manatees (trophic level 2.0), and followed by baleen whales (3.35), sea otters (3.45), seals (3.95), sea lions and fur seals (4.03), toothed whales (4.23), and polar bears (4.08).
With the aid of ecosystem models and other quantitative analyses, the degree of competition can be quantified, and the consequences of changing predator-prey numbers can be predicted. These analyses show that many species of fish are major competitors of marine mammals. A number of field studies have also shown negative effects of reduced prey abundance on body size and survival of marine mammals. However, there are fewer examples of marine mammal populations affecting their prey due perhaps to the difficulty of monitoring such interactions, or to the complexity of most marine mammal food webs.
keywords PhdTLmarine mammalsdietbackground
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Growth in body size of the Steller sea lion.
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Winship, A.J., A.W. Trites and D.G. Calkins. 2001.
|
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Journal of Mammalogy 82:500-519.
|
|
abstract
Growth models (mass and length) were constructed for male (>1 year old), female
(>1
year old), and pregnant female Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) shot on
rookeries or
haulouts, or in coastal waters of southeastern Alaska, the Gulf of Alaska, or
the Bering
Sea ice edge between 1976 and 1989. The Richards model best described growth
in body
length and mass. Females with fetuses were 3 cm longer and 28 kg heavier on average
than females of the same age without fetuses. Males grew in length over a longer
period
than did females and exhibited a growth spurt in mass that coincided with sexual
maturity
between 5 and 7 years of age. Average predicted standard lengths of males and
females
>12 years of age were 3.04 and 2.32 m, respectively, and average predicted masses
were
681 and 273 kg, respectively. Maximum recorded mass was 910 kg for an adult male.
Males achieved 90% of their asymptotic length and mass by 8 and 9 years of age,
respectively,
compared with 4 and 13 years, respectively, for females. Residuals of the size-at-age
models indicated seasonal changes in growth rates. Young animals (<6 years old)
and
adult males grew little during the breeding season (May–July), and adult
males did not
resume growth until sometime after November.
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Migration and population structure of northeast Pacific whales off the coast of British Columbia: analysis of commercial whaling records from 1908–1967.
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Gregr, E., L. Nichol, J. Ford, G. Ellis and A.W. Trites. 2000.
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Marine Mammal Science 16:699-727.
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abstract
Data recorded from 24,862 whales killed by British Columbia coastal whaling stations between 1908 and 1967 revealed trends in the abundance, sex ratios, age structure, and distribution of sperm (Physeter macrocephalus), fin (Balaenoptera physalus), sei (Balaenoptera borealis), humpback (Megaptera novaeangliae), and blue (Balaenoptera musculus) whales. The catch data were analyzed using annual and monthly mean values. Monthly and annual variation in whaling effort was deduced from accounts of the history of British Columbia coastal whaling, and biases arising from changes in effort were considered in the interpretation of the results. During the later years of whaling (1948-1967), the mean lengths of captured whales declined significantly and pregnancy rates dropped to near zero in fin, sei, and blue whales. Monthly patterns in numbers killed revealed a summer migration of sei and blue whales past Vancouver Island, and confirms anecdotal suggestions that local populations of fin and humpback whales once spent extended periods in the coastal waters of British Columbia. Furthermore, the data strongly suggest that sperm whales mated (April-May) and calved (July-August) in British Columbia’s offshore waters. The historic whaling records reveal much about the migratory behavior and distribution of the large whales species as they once were, and may continue to be, in the northeastern Pacific. Verifying the persistence of these trends in the remnant populations is a necessary and logical next step.
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The reliability of skinfold-calipers for measuring blubber thickness of Steller sea lion pups (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Jonker, R.A.H. and A.W. Trites. 2000.
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Marine Mammal Science 16:757-766.
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abstract
Twelve dead Steller sea lion pups (Eumetopias jubatus) aged 3-14 d were recovered from rookeries in Southeast Alaska. They had a wide range of body sizes and conditions (small to large and fat to no fat). The ability of calipers to estimate the thickness of their blubber layer was assessed with a set of skinfold calipers. Average error of measurement for skin and blubber thickness was an acceptable 5.4%, but the skin and blubber of the pups were highly compressible. Skinfold thickness increased with body mass but did not necessarily reflect the development of blubber, given that pups with no blubber also showed an increase in skinfold thickness with increases in body mass. Skinfold thickness of sea lion pups appears to predict body size better than it predicts blubber thickness, making it difficult if not impossible to develop a simple index of body condition or a calculation of percent body fat for Steller sea lion pups from skinfold caliper measurements.
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Digestive efficiency and dry-matter digestibility of Steller sea lions fed herring, pollock, salmon and squid.
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Rosen, D.A.S. and A.W. Trites. 2000.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 78:234-239.
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abstract
Dry-matter digestibility and energy digestive efficiency were measured in six
juvenile Steller sea lions
(Eumetopias jubatus) fed three diets each consisting of a
single species: herring,
pollock, and squid. Two of the
animals were also fed pink salmon. Dry-matter digestibility (DMD) and digestive
efficiency (DE) were measured using
the energy and manganese concentration in fecal and food samples. DE values were
high for all prey species (herring:
95.4 &plusmn; 0.7% (mean &plusmn; SD), pollock: 93.9 &plusmn;
1.4%,
salmon: 93.4 &plusmn; 0.5%,
squid: 90.4 &plusmn; 1.3%). Steller sea lions appear to
digest prey of high energy density more efficiently than prey of low energy density.
DMD values were also high for all
prey species (herring: 90.1 &plusmn; 1.8%, pollock: 86.5 &plusmn;
3.4%,
salmon:
87.3% &plusmn; 2.6, squid: 90.5 &plusmn; 1.2%). The low DMD
value for pollock compared with herring and squid was due to the high proportion
of bony material in pollock. There
was a strong linear relationship between DE and DMD for each prey type, but the
terms cannot be used interchange-ably.
DE measures are more meaningful than DMD in conveying the energetic benefits
derived by sea lions from dif-ferent
types of prey. Species-specific measures of the digestible energy obtained from
an array of prey items are a
necessary component in understanding the bioenergetic consequences of consuming
different prey species.
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Pollock and the decline of Steller sea lions: testing the junk-food hypothesis.
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Rosen, D.A.S. and A.W. Trites. 2000.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 78:1243-1258.
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abstract
The decline of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in the Gulf of Alaska and
the Aleutian Islands may be
the result of them eating too much pollock (a gadid fish) instead of a more balanced
and diverse diet containing fattier
fishes, such as herring or sandlance. We sought to test this junk-food hypothesis
by feeding six captive Steller sea lions
(ages 0.9–4.5 years) only pollock or herring. All sea lions gained mass
while eating herring. However, eating only
pollock for short periods (11–23 d) caused the study animals to lose an
average of 6.5% of their initial body mass
(0.6 kg/d) over an average feeding trial of 16 d (initial mass averaged 125 kg).
The animals were allowed to eat as
much pollock as they wanted but did not increase their food intake to compensate
for the low energy they were receiv-ing.
The sea lions showed progressive metabolic depression while losing body mass
on a pollock-only diet. The loss of
body mass while eating pollock was due to the lower gross energy content of pollock
versus herring, the higher cost of
digesting pollock, and the increased energy loss from digesting the larger quantity
of fish needed to compensate for the
lower energy content of pollock. Thus, our sea lions would have had to eat 35–80%
more pollock than herring to
maintain similar net energy intakes. Results from our captive-feeding studies
are consistent with the junk-food hypothe-sis
and have serious implications for Steller sea lions that have been eating primarily
pollock in the Gulf of Alaska and
the Aleutian Islands.
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Effect of ration size and meal frequency on assimilation and digestive efficiency in yearling Steller sea lions, Eumetopias jubatus.
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Rosen, D.A.S., L. Williams and A.W. Trites. 2000.
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Aquatic Mammals 26:76-82.
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abstract
Assimilation and digestive efficiencies were measured in four juvenile Steller
sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) fed three ration sizes of herring (3%, 6%, or
9% of body mass) at three frequencies (2, 3, or 4 times daily). Assimilation
efficiency (dry matter digestive efficiency) was 90.0 ± 2.0% (mean ± 1SD).
Digestive efficiency (efficiency of energy digestion) was 95.5 ± 1.0%.
There was a strong linear relationship between digestive and assimilation efficiency,
but no significant differences in either assimilation or digestive efficiency
with changes in feeding frequency or changes in daily food intake within the
ranges offered.
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Hydrodynamic drag in Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Stelle, L.L., R.W. Blake and A.W. Trites. 2000.
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Journal of Experimental Biology 203:1915-1923.
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abstract
Drag forces acting on Steller sea lions (Eumetopias
jubatus) were investigated from ‘deceleration during glide’
measurements. A total of 66 glides from six juvenile sea
lions yielded a mean drag coefficient (referenced to total
wetted surface area) of 0.0056 at a mean Reynolds number
of 5.5´10 6 . The drag values indicate that the boundary
layer is largely turbulent for Steller sea lions swimming
at these Reynolds numbers, which are past the point of
expected transition from laminar to turbulent flow. The
position of maximum thickness (at 34 % of the body length
measured from the tip of the nose) was more anterior than
for a ‘laminar’ profile, supporting the idea that there is
little laminar flow. The Steller sea lions in our study were
characterized by a mean fineness ratio of 5.55. Their
streamlined shape helps to delay flow separation, reducing
total drag. In addition, turbulent boundary layers are more
stable than laminar ones. Thus, separation should occur
further back on the animal. Steller sea lions are the largest
of the otariids and swam faster than the smaller California
sea lions (Zalophus californianus). The mean glide velocity
of the individual Steller sea lions ranged from 2.9 to
3.4ms -1 or 1.2–1.5 body lengths s -1 . These length-specific
speeds are close to the optimum swim velocity of
1.4 body lengths s -1 based on the minimum cost of transport
for California sea lions.
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Morphometric measurements and body condition of healthy and starving Steller sea lion pups (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Trites, Andrew W. and Remco A.H. Jonker. 2000.
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Aquatic Mammals 26:151-157.
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abstract
The thickness and weight of skin, blubber, and body core were measured from 12 dead Steller sea lion pups (Eumetopias jubatus). These necropsied pups represented a wide range of body sizes and conditions (small to large, and fat to no-fat), and were chosen to compare the relative body conditions of healthy and starved pups. Seven of the pups lacked blubber and were significantly lighter for a given length compared to the five that had fat at their time of death. Volume exceeded mass by a factor of 1.3% with density averaging 0.987g cm-3. Skin and blubber were not uniformly thick over the body surface. Skin was thinnest on the head and around the flippers (3mm), and became thicker towards the rump (5mm). Skin thickness did not differ between dorsal and ventral sides, unlike blubber, which was thickest on the ventral side, increasing from the snout (1.5mm)to midtrunk (7mm) and decreasing posteriorly (5mm at the tail). Along the back, blubber increased from 1 mm at the snout to about 4.5mm at mid-trunk. The five pups that died of trauma had about 13% skin and 10% blubber (expressed as a proportion of total body mass). Starvelings lost an estimated 43% of their body mass before dying (10% blubber, and 33% body core). Morphometric measurements applied to three proposed indices of body condition suggest that girth is not a good predictor of body condition for Steller sea lion pups. Only the ratio of observed to predicted body mass derived from standardized mass-length relationships could distinguish starvelings from pups with body fat.
keywords morphometric measurements, body condition, Steller sea lions, pups, skin, volume, density, starvation, #2
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Experimental attempts to reduce predation by harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) on outmigrating juvenile salmonids.
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Yurk, H. and A.W. Trites. 2000.
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Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 129:1360-1366.
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abstract
During spring, harbor seals Phoca vitulina
feed at night under two bridges spanning the Puntledge
River in Courtenay, British Columbia, Canada. Posi-tioned
parallel to one another, ventral side up, the seals
form a feeding line across the river to intercept thou-sands
of out-migrating salmonid smolts. During a 4-week
observation period in the spring of 1996, we at-tempted
to disrupt the seals’ feeding patterns by (a) de-ploying
a mechanical feeding barrier (cork line), (b) al-tering
the lighting conditions (lights on a bridge were
turned off), and (c) installing an acoustic harassment
device. We found acoustic harassment to be the most
effective feeding deterrent. Of the other two deterrents,
turning off the bridge lights was more effective than
deploying a cork line, which had little effect. Acoustic
harassment devices appear to be the most effective, non-lethal
means for protecting juvenile salmonids from har-bor
seal predation in portions of the Puntledge River.
Natural predators that prey upon both out-mi-grating
and returning anadromous fish can detri-mentally
affect the survival of depressed fish pop-ulations
(Bigg et al. 1990; Fraker 1994; Olesiuk
et al. 1995). In the northeast Pacific, seals and sea
lions are commonly observed feeding on returning
adult Pacific salmon Oncorhynchus spp. in rivers
and estuaries during summer and fall (Spalding
1964; Olesiuk et al. 1990). Seals also intercept out-migrating
smolts in spring and early summer (Ole-siuk
et al. 1995). Among the better-studied seal–
salmon interactions are those in the Puntledge Riv-er
on Vancouver Island, British Columbia (Bigg
et al. 1990; Olesiuk et al. 1995; Trites et al. 1996;
Figure 1).
Harbor seals Phoca vitulina in the Puntledge
River regularly position themselves side by side,
ventral side up, in the upstream shadow of two
bridges near the light–shadow boundary. The seals
* Corresponding author: yurk@zoology.ubc.ca
Received November 29, 1999; accepted June 5, 2000
swim against the river current and hold their po-sition
in the water. Minimal movements of their
hind flippers cause no apparent disturbance to the
surface waters. This feeding strategy allows the
seals to form an almost continuous barrier so they
can intercept smolts that drift downstream near the
surface. Apparently, the seals are assisted in their
feeding efforts by the bridge lights that illuminate
the water surface.
One way to enhance the survival of salmonids
is to disrupt the feeding patterns of their predators.
Techniques vary, but include making the smolts
foul-tasting, creating a mechanical barrier that pre-vents
seals from entering estuaries or river sys-tems,
and installing optic or acoustic harassment
devices (AHD) to hinder the seals from feeding in
particular areas (Gearin et al. 1986; Mate and Har-vey
1987; Pfeifer 1989)
The AHDs are generally considered to be ef-fective
in deterring seals and sea lions from prey-ing
on fish in certain areas. The widespread use of
these devices by aquaculture operators, who use
them to deter seals and sea lions from entering net-pens,
attests to this claim. The AHDs have also
deterred a large number of California sea lions
Zalophus californianus from preying on returning
winter steelhead Oncorhynchus mykiss in the Chit-tenden
Locks, Seattle, Washington (Fox et al.
1996). However, at aquaculture sites and at the
Chittenden Locks, some pinnipeds appear to be-come
acclimated to AHD sounds and may have to
be physically removed (Fox et al. 1996).
The goal of our study was to disrupt the feeding
patterns of harbor seals feeding on smolts in the
Puntledge River. During an observation period in
April and May 1996, we evaluated three methods:
installation of a mechanical feeding barrier, alter-ation
of artificial light on the river, and deployment
of an AHD.
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Mitochondrial and microsatellite DNA analyses of harbour seal population structure in the northeast Pacific Ocean.
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Burg, T.M., A.W. Trites and M.J. Smith. 1999.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 77:930-943.
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abstract
The genetic diversity and population structure of harbour seals (Phoca vitulina
richardsi) along the coasts of
British Columbia and parts of Alaska were investigated using both mitochondrial
DNA (mtDNA) and nuclear DNA. A
475-bp fragment of the mitochondrial control region was amplified and sequenced
from 128 animals. Sixty variable
sites defined 72 mtDNA haplotypes with pairwise nucleotide differences as high
as 5%. Fifty-eight haplotypes were
represented by a single individual, and shared haplotypes were generally restricted
to a small geographic range.
Phylogenetic reconstruction revealed two distinct populations comprising (i)
southern British Columbia and
(ii) northern British Columbia – southeast Alaska. Furthermore, the order
of the clades suggests that the Pacific Ocean
was colonized at least twice, 670 000 and 380 000 years ago. Haplotypes from
the first invasion are restricted to a
small number of seals around southern Vancouver Island. Analyses of five polymorphic
microsatellite loci showed
significant differences between the populations of southern British Columbia
and northern British Columbia – Alaska.
Migration rates for males based on microsatellite data (3–22 seals/generation)
were higher than those obtained for
females from mtDNA data (0.3 females/generation). Combining all the DNA data
collected to date suggests that there
are at least three populations of harbour seals in the Pacific composed of seals
from (i) Japan, Russia, Alaska, and
northern British Columbia, (ii) southern British Columbia and Puget Sound, Washington,
and (iii) the outer coasts of
Washington, Oregon, and California. The data do not support the existence of
two subspecies of harbour seals in the
Pacific Ocean.
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Seasonal differences in adaptation to prolonged fasting in juvenile Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus).
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Rea, L.D., D.A.S. Rosen and A.W. Trites. 1999.
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In The FASEB Journal (Federation of American Societies of Experimental Biology). Washington, D.C., April 17-21, 1999. Vol 13(5) pp. A740
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abstract
Five juvenile Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) between the ages of 3 and 4 years were experimentally fasted for 9 to 14 d to assess changes in mass and in key plasma metabolites indicative of biochemical adaptation to fasting. The 5 sea lions lost 20.4 to 35.1 kg each, at a rate of 1 to 2% of their initial body mass per day. Two animals fasted during the natural breeding season (June) exhibited a mean daily loss of 1.6 +/- 0.1kg d-1. This was significantly lower than the mean 2.8 +/- 0.1kg d-1 lost by sea lions fasted outside the normal breeding season in April, October and November (p<0.001). The two sea lion studied in June maintained low BUN concentrations throughout the remainder of the study, while the remaining 3 animals showed significant increases after 7 d of fasting. Only the two juveniles fasted during the breeding season maintained a protein sparing metabolism, typical of the species adapted to long-term fasting. With the exception of the smallest female (after 12 d of fasting), ketone body levels ranged from 0.03 to 0.17 mM. Seasonal differences in how sea lions adapt to fasting suggests that these animals would be more severely impacted by limited food resources during the non-breeding season.
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Metabolic effects of low-energy diet on Steller sea lions, Eumetopias jubatus.
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Rosen, D.A.S. and A.W. Trites. 1999.
|
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Physiological Zoology 72:723-731.
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abstract
Diets of six Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) were
switched between a high (herring) and a low (squid) energy
density food for 14 d to determine the effects on ingested
prey mass, body mass, resting metabolic rate, and the heat
increment of feeding. Body mass was measured daily, and
resting metabolism was measured weekly by gas respiro-metry.
Ingested food mass did not differ significantly be-tween
the squid diet and the control or the recovery herring
diet periods. As a result of differences in energy density,
gross energy intake was significantly lower during the squid
diet phase than during either the control or recovery pe-riods.
As a result, sea lions lost an average of 1.1 kg/d,
totaling 12.2% of their initial body mass by the end of the
experimental period. The heat increment of feeding for a 4-kg
squid meal was significantly lower than for a similarly
sized meal of herring. Decreases in both absolute (24.0 to
18.0 MJ/d, 224%) and mass-corrected (903 to 697 kJ/d/
kg
0.67
, 220%) metabolism were observed by the end of the
squid feedings. This study suggests that sea lions can depress
their resting metabolism in response to decreases in energy
intake or body mass, regardless of satiation level.
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Ecosystem Considerations and the limitations of ecosystem models in fisheries management: insights from the Bering Sea.
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Trites, A.W., P.A. Livingston, M.C. Vasconcellos, S. Mackinson, A.M. Springer and D. Pauly. 1999.
|
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In Ecosystem Approaches for Fisheries Management. Alaska Sea Grant College Program, Alaska. pp. 609-619.
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abstract
Over the past 10 years there has been increasing criticism of management
decisions that are based on singlespecies approaches and a call for the
implementation of ecosystem approaches. The major criticism of singlespecies
models is that they cannot predict changes in community structure.
Unfortunately, our experience in modeling the Bering Sea shows that
these same criticisms can also be leveled against ecosystem models.
We employed trophic massbalance models (Ecopath and Ecosim) to
examine some possible explanations for the changes that occurred in the
Bering Sea between the 1950s and 1980s. We removed fish and mammalsfrom the modeled
system and tracked how other components of the ecosystem
responded. Our massbalance models indicate that neither whaling
nor commercial fisheries were sufficient to explain the 400% increase
in pollock biomass and other changes that may have occurred between
the two time periods. The simulations further suggest that environmental
factors, affecting recruitment or primary production, may be more important
in determining the dynamics of the Bering Sea ecosystem than predator
prey interactions alone. These findings illustrate that mass balance
models that do not account for the impact of climate variability on yearclass
strength cannot provide reliable estimates of trends in marine fish
production. However, our models can show how predation and fishing
can affect trophic interactions among species. As such, ecosystem models
are a useful scientific tool to identify gaps in understanding and data
needs, but are unlikely to ever replace singlespecies models. They may
instead complement and provide parameters to singlespecies models.
Ecosystem models such as ours are still in the early stages of development
and will become increasingly more important as a management tool
as they begin to incorporate spatial and oceanographic/climatic information.
keywords PhD MMecosystem modelmodeling limitations Bering Sea fisheries management
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Diet composition and trophic levels of marine mammals.
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Pauly, D., A.W. Trites, E. Capuli and V. Christensen. 1998.
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ICES Journal of Marine Science 55:467-481.
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abstract
Standardized diet compositions were derived for 97 species of marine mammals
from
published accounts of stomach contents as well as from morphological, behavioural
and other information. Diet was apportioned among eight categories of prey types
(benthic invertebrates, large zooplankton, small squids, large squids, small
pelagic
fishes, mesopelagic fishes, miscellaneous fishes and higher invertebrates). Trophic
levels
were estimated for each species of marine mammals and compared with published
estimates derived using stable isotope ratios. Trophic levels ranged from 3.2–3.4
in
baleen whales and sea otters, to 3.8–4.4 in most pinnipeds and odontocete
whales, to
4.5–4.6 in killer whales. Such information can be used for ecosystem modelling
and
related studies.
keywords marine mammals; diets; trophic levels; food organisms; stomach content; Cetacea; Balaenoptera; Odontocetes; Orcinus orca; Pinnipedia; Enhydra lutris; cetaceans; whales; Finback whales; Rorquals; Sea otter; Killer whale; Bering Sea species;
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Estimating mean body masses of marine mammals from maximum body lengths.
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Trites, A.W. and D. Pauly. 1998.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 76:886-896.
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abstract
Generalized survival models were applied to growth curves published for 17 species
of cetaceans (5 mysticetes,
12 odontocetes) and 13 species of pinnipeds (1 odobenid, 4 otariids, 8 phocids).
The mean mass of all individuals in the
population was calculated and plotted against the maximum body length reported
for each species. The data showed strong
linearity (on logarithmic scales), with three distinct clusters of points corresponding
to the mysticetes (baleen whales),
odontocetes (toothed whales), and pinnipeds (seals, sea lions, and walruses).
Exceptions to this pattern were the sperm whales,
which appeared to be more closely related to the mysticetes than to the odontocetes.
Regression equations were applied to the
maximum lengths reported for 76 species of marine mammals without published growth
curves. Estimates of mean body mass
were thus derived for 106 living species of marine mammals.
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Heat Increment of Feeding in Steller sea lions, Eumetopias jubatus.
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Rosen, D.A.S. and A.W. Trites. 1997.
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Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 118A:877-881.
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abstract
The heat increment of feeding (HIF) was measured in six captive, juvenile Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus), fed meals of either 2 or 4 kg of herring. HIF was calculated as the post-prandial increase in metabolism above baseline levels, and was measured using open-circuit (gas) respirometry. It averaged 12.4 +/- 0.9% (SE) of ingested energy intake for the 4-kg meal trials, and 9.9 +/- 0.9% for the 2-kg meal size. The effect lasted 8-10 hr for the larger meal size. Metabolism peaked 3.7 hr after feeding, and was 2.13 times higher than baseline levels. For the 2-kg meal size, the effect lasted 6-8 hr, with metabolism peaking 2.8 hr after ingestion at 1.76 times baseline levels. Our estimates of HIF for Steller sea lions are at the lower end of estimates for terrestrial mammals, and are consistent with estimates for other marine mammals.
keywords digestion, heat increment of feeding, pinnipeds, specific dynamic action, Steller sea lion
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The role of pinnipeds in the ecosystem.
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Trites, A.W. 1997.
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In G. Stone, J. Goebel and S. Webster (eds), Symposium of the 127th Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society. New England Aquarium, Conservation Department, Boston. pp. 31-38.
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abstract
The proximate role played by seals and sea lions is obvious: they are predators
and consumers of fish
and invertebrates. Less intuitive is their ultimate role (dynamic and structural)
within the ecosystem.
The limited information available suggests that some pinnipeds perform a dynamic
role by transferring
nutrients and energy, or by regulating the abundance of other species. Others
may play a structural
role by influencing the physical complexity of their environment; or they may
synthesize the marine
environment and serve as indicators of ecosystem change. Field observations suggest
the ultimate
role that pinnipeds fill is species specific and a function of the type of habitat
and ecosystem they
occupy. Their functional and structural roles appear to be most evident in simple
short-chained food
webs, and are least obvious and tractable in complex long-chained food webs due
perhaps to high
variability in the recruitment of fish or nonlinear interactions and responses
of predators and prey.
The impact of historic removals of whales, sea otters and seals are consistent
with these observations.
Many of these removals produced unexpected changes in other components of the
ecosystem. Better
insights into the role that pinnipeds play and the effect of removing them will
come as better data on
diets and predator-prey functional responses are included in ecosystem models.
keywords pinnipeds, ecosystems, predators, interactions, models, #4
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Competition between fisheries and marine mammals for prey and primary production in the Pacific Ocean.
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Trites, A.W., V. Christensen and D. Pauly. 1997.
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Journal of Northwest Atlantic Fishery Science. 22:173-187.
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abstract
The degree of competition between fisheries and marine mammals in the Pacific
Ocean
was estimated for 7 statistical areas defined by the Food and Agriculture Organization
of
the United Nations (FAO). Catch statistics compiled from FAO sources show that
the
amount of fish caught in the Pacific Ocean rose from 2 million tons in the late-1940s
to
over 50 million tons in the early-1990s. Recent stagnation and declines occurring
in some
areas of the Pacific suggest that Pacific fisheries cannot continue to expand
as they had
previously.
Based on estimates of population size, total biomass and daily consumption rates,
it
was estimated that the 84 species of marine mammals inhabiting the Pacific Ocean
con-sume
about three times as much food as humans harvest. A large fraction (>60%)
of the
food caught by marine mammals consisted of deep sea squids and very small deep
sea
fishes not harvestable by humans, thus limiting the extent of direct competition
between
fisheries and marine mammals. Moreover, the most important consumers of commercially
exploited fish are other predatory fish, not marine mammals.
Although direct competition between fisheries and marine mammals for prey appears
rather limited, there may be considerable indirect competition for primary production.
The primary production required to sustain marine mammals in each of the 7 FAO
areas
varies within a narrow range, suggesting that the diversity and abundance of
marine mam-mals
may have slowly evolved to fully exploit their niche and maximize their use of
avail-able
primary production. This contrasts with the rapid expansion of fisheries and
their
relatively recent dependence on primary production, which may have led to what
we call
‘
food web competition’.
keywords competition, fisheries, food, feeding, marine mammals, Pacific Ocean, #3
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Assessing the use of hard parts in faeces to identify harbour seal prey: results of captive feeding trials.
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Cottrell, P.W., A.W. Trites and E.H. Miller. 1996.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 74:875-880.
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abstract
Faeces were collected from four captive harbour seals (Phoca vitulina)
that consumed
known amounts of
herring (Clupea harengus), walleye pollock (Therugru chalcogrumma), Pacific
hake (Merluccius productus), surf smelt
(Hypomesus pretiosus), and juvenile chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshmvytschu).
The goal was to determine which
structures (hard parts) passed through the digestive tract (e.g., eye lenses,
scales, vertebrae, otoliths), and which of
these could be used to determine the type and number of fish consumed. Nearly
5000 fish were consumed, from which
over 50000 hard parts were recovered from seal faeces. Scales were the most numerous
of the 23 structures recovered
(> 20 000), followed by vertebrae, eye lenses, and otoliths. Morphological
distinctiveness and digestive erosion of the
structures varied among fish taxa. Two to five structures accounted for over
90% of the taxon-specific elements
recovered, depending upon the species of fish consumed. Otoliths, which are used
routinely to characterize pinniped
diets, accounted for only 17% of the identified taxon-specific hard parts. The
variation in types of structures and rates
of recovery across taxa underscores the importance of using several types of
hard parts to identify prey. Identifying
several different prey structures increases the likelihood of identifying a prey
type.
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The influence of climatic seasonality on the life cycle of the Pribilof northern fur seal.
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Trites, A.W. and G.A. Antonelis. 1994.
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Marine Mammal Science 10:311-324.
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abstract
Weather conditions recorded from 1956 to1986 on St. Paul Island, Alaska, were probed to establish their influence upon the northern fur seal's lifecycle (Callorhinus ursinus). Air temperatures, wind speeds, and relative humidity levels were seasonally decomposed and compared with the timing of pupping and migration. Most pups are born in early July when air temperatures and relative humidity approach their highest annual levels and wind speeds are at their lowest. Weather conditions favor growth and survival of pups from July to September but are unfavorable in June. A rapid deterioration in weather through October and November corresponds with the fall migration of pups and lactating females. The data suggest the pivotal event in the fur seal's lifecycle is the timing of birth and survival of nursing pups. As such, the ultimate determinant of the precisely timed fur seal life cycle appears to be climatic seasonality during the breeding season.
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Capturing male northern fur seals from haulout sites: estimates of capture efficiency and escapement.
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Trites, A.W. and J. Scordino. 1994.
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Aquatic Mammals 20:73-79.
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abstract
The ability to capture northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) was observed at two haulout sites on St. Paul Island, Alaska, during annual harvests con- ducted from 1980 to 1983. Males using these sites were classified as bachelors if within the size limit of the harvest (less than 49 inches in length) and as bulls if longer. The ability of sealers to capture bachelors was dependent on the numbers of bulls present at each haulout: the more bulls on land, the greater the capture rate of bachelors. Capture efficiency dropped on the few occasions when low numbers of bulls enabled the bachelors to remain close to the water edge. A decline in capture efficiency was also detected at low wind speeds, presumably because the bachelors were better able to hear the approaching sealers. On average, sealers captured 92.7% of the bachelors and 41.5% of the bulls that were onshore at any given time. The ability to easily capture immature males is potentially useful for researchers to obtain biological information about northern fur seals. Over 50% of a haulout population can be captured in as little as 4 days.
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Biased estimates of fur seal pup mass: origins and implications.
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Trites, A.W. 1993.
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Journal of Zoology (London) 229:515-525.
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abstract
The mass of fur seal pups weighed in different years can be used to estimate growth rates or compared with one another to make inferences about the relative condition of a population. However, unless appropriate precautions are taken, many factors can bias estimates of pup mass and lead to incorrect conclusions. Using data collected from tagged and untagged northern fur seal pups (Callorhinus ursinus) at the Pribilof Islands, Alaska, I assess how milk consumption, the timing of sampling, and the effects of growth and sample size influence the size of pups captured for weighing. Evidence is presented suggesting that pup mass may increase in a sigmoid fashion, with the most rapid rate of growth occurring when about two months old. This phenomenon can confound efforts to compare the masses of pups weighed on different days in different years, particularly if pups are weighed over the period of rapid growth. Variability in pup mass increases with time because growth rates of individuals vary and because the amount of milk pups consume increases with body size. Thus sample sizes must be increased as the pups grow older in order to detect statistically significant differences in mean body mass. There is also evidence that pups of different ages and sizes are not randomly distributed on the breeding beaches and are not randomly selected for weighing. It appears that the first pups captured for weighing are smaller and younger than subsequent captures, possibly because smaller pups are easier to handle and are segregated to the peripheral rookery regions where sampling begins. These hidden biases, related to sampling error and fur seal biology, must be considered and controlled for when weighing fur seal pups.
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Unexpected changes in reproductive rates and mean age at first birth during the decline of the Pribilof fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus).
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Trites, A.W. and A.E. York. 1993.
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Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 50:858-864.
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abstract
From 1956 to 1968, female northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) were harvested on the Pribilof Islands, Alaska, in an effort to increase the productivity of the herd. In theory, pregnancy rates should have increased and the age at first birth should have declined as population density was reduced. Instead the opposite happened: pregnancy rates dropped and age of first birth increased. It is unlikely that these changes were caused by shortages of food or poor physical condition of the females, given that body size increased over this period. The most likely explanations for the changes observed between 1958 and 1974 are related to altered age and sex ratios of breeding animals caused by the depletion of females and/or the harvesting of young males. Changes in pregnancy rates and age at first birth are inconsistent with the density-dependence paradigm and suggest that relative densities of mature age and sex classes on the breeding beaches (a product of social interactions and territory size) may be more consequential than absolute population densities in affecting the reproductive biology of northern fur seals.
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The RAM-packs came back: a method for attaching and recovering pinniped data recorders.
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Ellis, G.E. and A.W. Trites. 1992.
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Aquatic Mammals 18:61-64.
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abstract
A means of attaching and recovering pinniped data recorders was developed and tested on harbour seals (Phoca vitulina). A buoyant pack containing a VHF-transmitter and a data recorder, was glued to the pelt. The moult acted as the release mechanism. The detached RAM-packs, whether floating at sea or washed ashore, were later located by aircraft, boat, or on foot using the radio transmitter. In a trial program. RAM-packs were applied to six harbour seals off the coast of British Columbia. The results show the packs do not cause undue stress to the animal and are useful for recovering data from pinnipeds that are difficult to recapture.
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Reproductive synchrony and the estimation of mean date of birth from daily counts of northern fur seal pups.
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Trites, A.W. 1992.
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Marine Mammal Science 8:44-56.
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abstract
Two methods for estimating the mean date of birth from daily counts of northern fur seal pups (Callorhinus ursinus) are presented and applied to data collected on the Pribilof Islands in 1951, 1962, 1963 and 1983. The mean date of birth over the four years was July 9. Reproduction is highly synchronized and consistent from one year to the next. Pupping occurs over a five week period with over 50% of the pups being born during the first two weeks of July.
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Northern fur seals: Why have they declined?
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Trites, A.W. 1992.
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Aquatic Mammals 18:3-18.
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abstract
A high mortality of juvenile and adult female northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) is believed to be responsible for the most recent decline of the Pribilof population which began in the early 1970s. The two most likely explanations for the high mortality rates are related to 1) commercial fishing of major fur seal prey species in the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska, and 2) entrapment of seals in lost and discarded fishing gear. A review of the entanglement hypothesis found many of the assertions made about the extent of entanglement mortality were poorly supported by the available data and were inconsistent with the dynamics of other pinniped populations. The build up of commercial fishing is consistent with the timing of the fur seal decline, but studies of growth (lengths and weights of pups, subadults and adults) and the duration of foraging trips by lactating mothers suggest per capita increases in food abundance. These fur seal observations suggest food resources in the spring are sufficient to meet the needs of the currently low population as the seals migrate north through the coastal waters of British Columbia and Alaska. However, the data are also consistent with the view that per capita fish abundance is insufficient for young fur seals during the fall migration as the seals swim south through the Aleutian archipelago. It is hypothesized that reduced food availability for young fur seals in the Gulf of Alaska during this stage of the seal's life cycle creates a bottleneck for the entire population, which can account for the decline of the Pribilof herd. This possibility is supported by the sharp decline in numbers of Steller sea lions and harbour seals along the Aleutian Islands and Gulf of Alaska.
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Changes in body growth of northern fur seals from 1958 to 1972: density effects or changes in the ecosystem?
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Trites, A.W. and M.A. Bigg. 1992.
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Fisheries Oceanography 10:127-136.
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abstract
Analysis of morphometric measurements collected from northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) between 1958 and 1974 suggests a periodicity in growth rates and physical condition that may reflect underlying, large-scale environmental changes. The data further suggest that fur seals attained larger body sizes as the breeding population on the Pribilof Islands declined over this 16-year period. These conclusions are based on changes observed in the mean body size and condition index of mature females, changes in the annual growth rates of immature females, and changes in male and female growth curves. Interpreting annual changes in physical growth is complicated by inconsistencies in sampling between years and by large natural variations in body mass and body length within years. Commercial fisheries may influence the abundance of prey, and alter the physical growth of pinnipeds, but other physical and biological factors are probably more important determinants. Changes in body length and mass are useful indicators of per capita prey abundance and offer useful insights into conditions experienced by fur seals. Unfortunately, it is not possible to determine whether changes observed in growth are due entirely to changes in population density or whether they reflect changes in the ecosystem, or some combination of both.
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Fetal growth of northern fur seals: life history strategy and sources of variation.
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Trites, A.W. 1991.
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Canadian Journal of Zoology 69:2608-2617.
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abstract
Sex-specific growth curves are described for northern fur seal fetuses, Callorhinus ursinus. The relationships between body length, body mass, and gestational age are derived by regression analysis based on 7000 fetuses collected during 1958-1974 as part of a joint Canadian-American pelagic research effort. Male fetuses grow faster and larger than female fetuses. Length approaches an asymptote with time, but the increase in fetal mass appears exponential until parturition. The size of the fetus is influenced by the age, size, and reproductive history of the mother. Primiparous females produce smaller pups than multiparous females. This difference in fetal size is presumably due to physiological changes associated with having been previously pregnant and is not explained merely by differences in the size and 'age of the different parities. Older and larger females produce progressively larger fetuses until reaching their reproductive prime at about the age of 10-1 1 years. Adult females continue to grow beyond this age, but there is a senescent decline in the length and mass of the young they carry. There is no indication that the sex ratio differs from unity either between months, across years, or between mothers of different ages and parities.
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Does tagging and handling affect the growth of northern fur seal pups (Callorhinus ursinus)?
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Trites, A.W. 1991.
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Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 48:2436-2442.
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abstract
From 1957 to 1966, samples of tagged and marked northern fur seal pups (Callorhinus ursinus) consistently weighed less than untagged and unmarked pups on the Pribilof Islands, Alaska. At the time, it was concluded that tagging and handling had caused a loss of weight and had slowed the normal rate of pup growth. In reevaluating the data from this time period, it seems that tagged pups grew at the same rate as untagged pups, but were smaller at the time of tagging than average size pups. The growth curve for tagged pups appears to lag behind that of untagged pups, suggesting that tagged pups were born later in the breeding season and were more susceptible to being captured and tagged than older and heavier pups.
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Thermal budgets and climate spaces: the impact of weather on the survival of Galapagos (Arctocephalus galapagoensis Heller) and northern fur seal pups (Callorhinus ursinus L.).
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Trites, A.W. 1990.
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Functional Ecology 48:753-768.
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abstract
The ability of fur seal pups to cope with diverse climatic conditions on land was investigated by constructing a thermal budget based on published physiological studies. The model was applied to northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus L.) breeding on the Pribilof Islands, Alaska, and on San Miguel Island, California; also to the Galapagos fur seal pup (Arctocephalus galapagoensis Heller) on the Galapagos Islands. The combinations of environmental extremes that pups can withstand during the first week of life were identified. The study concluded that a healthy, average-sized pup on the Pribilofs could have tolerated any combination of air temperature, wind speed and level of humidity recorded since the mid 1950s, but that pups with low birth weights could have succumbed during periods of cold, wet and windy weather. On San Miguel Island, the model predicts high mortalities of large pups during hot, dry weather, which suggests strong selection pressures towards the survival of smaller animals. The model further suggests that the success of the Galapagos fur seal at the equator is related to its small body size and behavioral attributes, such as seeking shade and periodically wetting its fur.
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Estimating the juvenile survival rate of male northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus).
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Trites, A.W. 1989.
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Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 46:1428-1436.
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abstract
Three methods for estimating the survival rate of juvenile northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) are developed from the earlier works of Chapman, Smith and Polacheck, and Lander. Each of the methods I propose divides the estimated number of males alive at 2 yr of age by the estimated number of pups born in their year class. The number of surviving juveniles are reconstructed by back calculation using the number of males killed during the commercial harvest and the subsequent counts of bulls. The three methods differ in their assumptions concerning subadult survival and escapement from the harvest, although all produce similar estimates when applied to the St. Paul Island fur seals. These new estimates of juvenile survival (1950-80) are strongly correlated with the ratio of cohort kill to pup production and with estimates from the currently-used Lander procedure. This is because the harvest mortality of males is large compared with natural mortality. The new methods perform acceptably over a wider class of data than Lander's. Their greatest advantage over current procedures is that they provide a better insight into the reliability of the survival estimates they produce.
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The decline and fall of the Pribilof fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus): a simulation study.
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Trites, A.W. and P.A. Larkin. 1989.
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Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 46:1437-1445.
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abstract
A mathematical model incorporating the basic life history features of the North Pacific fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) approximated the decline of the Pribilof Islands population by reconstructing pup estimates and counts of adult males over the period 1950 to 1987. Simulation results suggest that commercial female harvesting and a series of poor juvenile survival rates were responsible for causing and maintaining the observed decline in pup production on St. Paul Island from 1956 to 1970. A more recent drop in pup production since 1976 is also attributed to poor juvenile survival, but with the addition of higher natural mortalities of adult females. It appears that the natural mortality of adult females may have increased by 2 to 5% beginning in the mid 1970s. We suspect reductions in the fur seal food base and entanglement-related mortality associated with commercial fishing in the North Pacific are contributing to the current decline, although neither possibility has yet been clearly demonstrated.
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Non-Refereed Publications:
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Predator-prey relationships.
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Trites, A.W. 2009.
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In B. Wursig W.F. Perrin (ed.), Encyclopedia of Marine Mammals. Academic Press, San Diego. pp. 933-936.
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abstract
Marine mammal predator – prey interactions occur over different spatial and temporal scales, making it difficult to empirically decipher the influences they have on one another and on their ecosystems. However, their coexistence suggests that marine mammal predators and their prey have had profound influences on each other’s behaviors, physiologies, morphologies, and life-history strategies. The diversity of niches filled by marine mammals makes it difficult to generalize about the evolutionary consequences of their interactions with prey, beyond stating the obvious: marine mammals have adapted to catch food, while their prey have adapted to avoid being caught. On the shorter ecological time scale, marine mammals can affect the abundance of other species by consuming or outcompeting them. They can also indirectly affect the abundance of nontargeted species by consuming one of their predators, and can have strong impacts on the overall dynamics and structure of their ecosystems. One of the best tools for understanding marine mammal predator – prey interactions is the ecosystem model. However, more work is required through experimental manipulations and observational studies to evaluate the choices made by marine mammals and the costs of obtaining different species of prey.
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Economic valuation of critical habitat closures.
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Berman, M., E.J. Gregr, G. Ishimura, R. Coatta, R. Flinn, U.R. Sumaila and A.W. Trites. 2008.
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In Fisheries Centre Research Reports. Vol 16(8) pp. 102
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abstract
We developed methods to estimate the spatial variation in economic values of ocean fisheries, and applied the methods to estimate the cost of closing groundfish fisheries in Steller sea lion Critical Habitat in the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska. The research addressed two related goals: (1) explicitly linking spatial variability of fisheries biomass and profitability over time to environmental variables; and (2) developing estimates of opportunity costs of time and area closures to the fishing industry at scales relevant to management. The approach involved two stages of statistical analyses. First, environmental conditions measured at 3 km and 9 km spatial scales and two-week and one-month intervals were used to predict fish biomass and fisheries catch per unit of effort (CPUE). Environmental variables included bathymetry, remotely sensed physical and biological observations, and output from a physical oceanographic circulation model. Second, we used predicted CPUE and spatial regulatory and cost factors to explain the spatial distribution of fishing effort over time. Our results suggested that 2001 Critical Habitat closures cost the North Pacific groundfish trawl fisheries 5-40 percent of their total potential net earnings. The improved methods for estimating opportunity costs of fisheries closures we present have direct applications to evaluating boundary changes to marine protected areas and other spatial management decisions. Limitations include the extensive data requirements and the need to bootstrap confidence intervals. If further research demonstrates the robustness and stability of the estimated relationships over time, the methods could project spatial fishery effects of climate variability and change, leading to dynamic spatial models linking fisheries with ecosystems.
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Population trends, diet, genetics, and observations of Steller sea lions in Glacier Bay National Park.
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Gelatt, T., A.W.Trites, K. Hastings, L. Jemison, K. Pitcher, and G. O’Corry-Crowe. 2007.
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In J.F. Piatt and S.M. Gende (eds), Proceedings of the Fourth Glacier Bay Science Symposium, U.S. Geological Survey, Juneau , Alaska. pp. 145-149.
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abstract
We are using demographics, scat analysis, and genetic measurements of Steller sea lions (SSLs)to understand the
factors affecting population status throughout Alaska. Steller sea lions are listed as threatened throughout Southeast Alaska
including Glacier Bay National Park where they frequent at least five terrestrial sites, including a recently established rookery
on Graves Rock. Breeding season counts in GBNP increased at ~6 percent/yr between 1989 and 2002. Brand resighting during
2003 revealed 16 western stock SSLs seen within the park. Survival to two months of age was 90 percent. Fifty pups were
branded at Graves Rock in 2002. It is necessary to mark more animals to estimate annual survival rates of juveniles and adults.
Sandlance and pollock were top prey items at Graves Rock and South Marble Island. Mitochondrial DNA analysis indicates that
the Graves Rock rookery was established in part by females from the western sea lion stock (west of 144° W longitude).
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Ecosystem models of the Aleutian Islands and Southeast Alaska show that Steller sea lions are impacted by killer whale predation when sea lion numbers are low.
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Guénette, S., S.J.J. Heymans, V. Christensen, A.W. Trites. 2007.
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In J.F. Piatt and S.M. Gende (eds), Proceedings of the Fourth Glacier Bay Science Symposium, U.S. Geological Survey, Juneau , Alaska. pp. 150-154.
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abstract
We constructed ecosystem models using the Ecopath with Ecosim software to evaluate whether predation by killer whales might explain the decline of Steller sea lions since the late 1970s in the western Aleutian Islands. We also sought to understand why sea lions increased in the presence of killer whales in Southeast Alaska. Modeling results reproduced the time series of abundances for exploited species and sea lions in both ecosystems. Simulation results suggest that killer whale predation contributed to the decline of sea lions in the western Aleutians, but that predation was not the primary cause of the population decline. Predation could however have become a significant source of mortality during the 1990s when sea lions numbers were much lower. In Southeast Alaska, predation was also found to be a signifi
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