AI Article Synopsis

  • Continued warming in the Arctic and loss of sea ice threaten the conservation of ringed seals, emphasizing the need for better understanding of their ecology to inform management.
  • Researchers tracked 17 ringed seals using satellite transmitters across summers from 2011 to 2016, revealing their movements between the Beaufort, Chukchi, and Bering Seas, with critical foraging dives to the seafloor.
  • Seasonal patterns showed that seals prefer to haul out at night in cooler months, transitioning to daytime in late spring, while seals affected by a past mortality event showed notable differences in behavior and physical traits.

Article Abstract

Continued Arctic warming and sea-ice loss will have important implications for the conservation of ringed seals, a highly ice-dependent species. A better understanding of their spatial ecology will help characterize emerging ecological trends and inform management decisions. We deployed satellite transmitters on ringed seals in the summers of 2011, 2014, and 2016 near Utqiaġvik (formerly Barrow), Alaska, to monitor their movements, diving, and haul-out behavior. We present analyses of tracking and dive data provided by 17 seals that were tracked until at least January of the following year. Seals mostly ranged north of Utqiaġvik in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas during summer before moving into the southern Chukchi and Bering Seas during winter. In all seasons, ringed seals occupied a diversity of habitats and spatial distributions, from near shore and localized, to far offshore and wide-ranging in drifting sea ice. Continental shelf waters were occupied for >96% of tracking days, during which repetitive diving (suggestive of foraging) primarily to the seafloor was the most frequent activity. From mid-summer to early fall, 12 seals made ~1-week forays off-shelf to the deep Arctic Basin, most reaching the retreating pack-ice, where they spent most of their time hauled out. Diel activity patterns suggested greater allocation of foraging efforts to midday hours. Haul-out patterns were complementary, occurring mostly at night until April-May when midday hours were preferred. Ringed seals captured in 2011-concurrent with an unusual mortality event that affected all ice-seal species-differed morphologically and behaviorally from seals captured in other years. Speculations about the physiology of molting and its role in energetics, habitat use, and behavior are discussed; along with possible evidence of purported ringed seal ecotypes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7319173PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6302DOI Listing

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