Author:
Zeppelin Tonya,Pelland Noel,Sterling Jeremy,Brost Brian,Melin Sharon,Johnson Devin,Lea Mary-Anne,Ream Rolf
Abstract
AbstractIn species exhibiting differential migration by sex and age, understanding what differences exist, and the adaptive reasons for these differences is critical for determining how demographic groups will respond to environmental variability and anthropogenic perturbations. We used satellite-telemetered movement and diving data to investigate differential migration and its ontogeny in a highly migratory North Pacific Ocean predator, the northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus; NFS), with a focus on understudied juvenile (1- to 2-year-old) animals. We instrumented 71 juvenile NFS in two years (2006–07 and 2007–08) at three major North American breeding sites and compared their migratory strategies with pups and adults. Although sexual dimorphism is strong in adult NFS, only weak differences in body mass between sexes were found in juveniles, which had similar body mass to pups (~3–4 months). However, unlike widely-dispersed pups, juvenile male and female NFS dispersed in different directions, and used different habitats characterized by distinct hydrography and prey assemblages during migration, similar to breeding adults. Juvenile diving behavior differed only modestly among habitats and between sexes, consistent with weak differences in body mass. Evidence of habitat sexual segregation by juvenile NFS contradicts previous hypotheses that physiological differences predominantly drive the ontogeny of differential migration.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference98 articles.
1. Dingle, H. & Drake, V. A. What is migration? Bioscience 57, 113–121 (2007).
2. Terrill, S. B. & Able, K. P. Bird migration terminology. Auk 105, 205–208 (1988).
3. Gentry, R. L. Behavior and Ecology of the Northern Fur Seal (Princeton University Press, 1998).
4. Peterson, R. S. Social behavior in pinnipeds with particular reference to the northern fur seal in The Behavior and Physiology of Pinnipeds (eds Harrison, R. J., Hubbard, R. C., Peterson, R. S., Rice, C. E., & Schusterman, R. J.) 3–53 (Appleton-Century-Crofts, 1968).
5. Gentry, R. L. & Holt, J. R. Attendance behavior of northern fur seals in Fur Seals: Maternal Strategies on Land and at Sea (eds Gentry, R. L. & Kooyman, G. L.) 41–60 (Princeton University Press, 1986).
Cited by
12 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献