Dietary plasticity and broad North Atlantic origins inferred from bulk and amino acid‐specific δ15N and δ13C favour killer whale range expansions into Arctic waters

Author:

Matthews Cory J. D.1ORCID,Yarnes Chris T.2,Lefort Kyle J.3,Edkins Tera L.1,Kiszka Jeremy J.4,Ferguson Steven H.1

Affiliation:

1. Arctic Aquatic Research Division, Fisheries and Oceans Canada 501 University Crescent Winnipeg Manitoba Canada

2. Stable Isotope Facility University of California Davis California USA

3. Fisheries and Oceans Canada St John's Newfoundland Canada

4. Institute of Environment, Department of Biological Sciences Florida International University North Miami Florida USA

Abstract

Abstract Killer whales (Orcinus orca) occur seasonally in the eastern Canadian Arctic (ECA), where their range expansion associated with declining sea ice have raised questions about the impacts of increasing killer whale predation pressure on Arctic‐endemic prey. We assessed diet and distribution of ECA killer whales using bulk and compound‐specific stable isotope analysis (CSIA) of amino acids (AA) of 54 skin biopsies collected from 2009 to 2020 around Baffin Island, Canada. Bulk ECA killer whale skin δ15N and δ13C values did not overlap with potential Arctic prey after adjustment for trophic discrimination, and instead reflected foraging history in the North Atlantic prior to their arrival in the ECA. Adjusted killer whale stable isotope (SI) values primarily overlapped with several species of North Atlantic baleen whales or tuna. Amino acid (AA)‐specific δ15N values indicated the ECA killer whales fed primarily on marine mammals, having similar glutamic acid δ15N–phenylalanine δ15N (δ15NGlx‐Phe) and threonine δ15N (δ15NThr) as mammal‐eating killer whales from the eastern North Pacific (ENP) that served as a comparative framework. However, one ECA whale grouped with the fish‐eating ENP ecotype based δ15NThr. Distinctive essential AA δ13C of ECA killer whale groups, along with bulk SI similarity to killer whales from different regions of the North Atlantic, indicates different populations converge in Arctic waters from a broad source area. Generalist diet and long‐distance dispersal capacity favour range expansions, and integration of these insights will be critical for assessing ecological impacts of increasing killer whale predation pressure on Arctic‐endemic species.

Funder

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Nunavut General Monitoring Plan

Nunavut Wildlife Management Board

Publisher

Wiley

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