Contemporary diets of walruses in Bristol Bay, Alaska suggest temporal variability in benthic community structure

Author:

Maniscalco John M.1,Springer Alan M.2,Counihan Katrina L.1,Hollmen Tuula12,Aderman Helen M.3,Toyukak, Sr. Moses3

Affiliation:

1. Science, Alaska SeaLife Center, Seward, AK, United States of America

2. College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of Alaska—Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK, United States of America

3. Qayassiq Walrus Commission, Dillingham, AK, United States of America

Abstract

Background Pacific walruses (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) are a conspicuous and important component of the Bristol Bay ecosystem and human social systems, but very little is known about walrus ecology in this region, principally their feeding ecology. The present work provides contemporary data on the diets of walruses at four haulout locations throughout Bristol Bay between 2014 and 2018. Methods We analyzed scat and gastrointestinal tract samples from these animals using quantitative polymerase chain reaction to amplify prey DNA, which allowed for diet estimates based on frequencies of prey item occurrence and on the relative importance of dietary items as determined from DNA threshold cycle scores. Results Diets were highly diverse at all locations, but with some variation in composition that may be related to the time of year that samples were collected (summer vs. autumn), or to spatial variability in the distribution of prey. Overall, polychaetes and tunicates had the highest frequencies of occurrence and relative abundances in 2014–15, but a major change in diet appears to have occurred by 2017–18. While some sample sizes were small, diets in these later years contrasted sharply, with a greater prevalence of sea cucumbers and mollusks, and reduced importance of decapods and fishes compared to the earlier years. Prey identified in scat samples from one collection site also contrasted sharply with those reported from the same location in 1981. The apparent temporal shifts in walrus prey may represent a changing benthic ecosystem due to warming waters in recent decades.

Funder

Alaska Department of Commerce

Community and Economic Development

Community Coastal Impact Assistance Grant

SeaWorld Busch Gardens and Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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