Divergent foraging strategies between populations of sympatric matrilineal killer whales

Author:

Tennessen Jennifer B12ORCID,Holt Marla M1ORCID,Wright Brianna M3ORCID,Hanson M Bradley1,Emmons Candice K1ORCID,Giles Deborah A4ORCID,Hogan Jeffrey T5ORCID,Thornton Sheila J6ORCID,Deecke Volker B7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Conservation Biology Division, Northwest Fisheries Science Center, National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration , Seattle, WA 98112 , USA

2. Lynker Technologies LLC , Leesburg, VA 20175 , USA

3. Pacific Biological Station, Fisheries and Oceans Canada , Nanaimo, BC V9T 6N7 , Canada

4. Department of Wildlife, Fish, & Conservation Biology, University of California, Davis , Davis, CA 95616 , USA

5. Cascadia Research Collective , Olympia, WA 98501 , USA

6. Pacific Science Enterprise Centre, Fisheries and Oceans Canada , West Vancouver, BC V7V 1N6 , Canada

7. Institute of Science and Environment, University of Cumbria , Ambleside, Cumbria LA22 9BB , UK

Abstract

AbstractIn cooperative species, human-induced rapid environmental change may threaten cost–benefit tradeoffs of group behavioral strategies that evolved in past environments. Capacity for behavioral flexibility can increase population viability in novel environments. Whether the partitioning of individual responsibilities within social groups is fixed or flexible across populations is poorly understood, despite its relevance for predicting responses to global change at the population and species levels and designing successful conservation programs. We leveraged bio-logging data from two populations of fish-eating killer whales (Orcinus orca) to quantify patterns of fine-scale foraging movements and their relationships with demography. We reveal striking interpopulation differences in patterns of individual foraging behavior. Females from the endangered Southern Resident (SRKW) population captured less prey and spent less time pursuing prey than SRKW males or Northern Resident (NRKW) females, whereas NRKW females captured more prey than NRKW males. The presence of a calf (≤3 years) reduced the number of prey captured by adult females from both populations, but disproportionately so for SRKW. SRKW adult males with a living mother captured more prey than those whose mother had died, whereas the opposite was true for NRKW adult males. Across populations, males foraged in deeper areas than females, and SRKW captured prey deeper than NRKW. These population-level differences in patterns of individual foraging behavior challenge the existing paradigm that females are the disproportionate foragers in gregarious resident killer whales, and demonstrate considerable variation in the foraging strategies across populations of an apex marine predator experiencing different environmental stressors.

Funder

Cetacean Research Program of Fisheries and Oceans Canada

University of Cumbria’s Research and Scholarship Development Fund

Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship

University of British Columbia Zoology Graduate Fellowship

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council Alexander Graham Bell Canada Graduate Scholarship

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

NOAA Northwest Fisheries Science Center

NOAA Office of Science and Technology International Science Strategy and Collaboration

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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