Abstract
AbstractRinged (Pusa hispida) and bearded (Erignathus barbatus) seals are vulnerable to loss of their sea ice habitat in the rapidly warming Arctic. In April and May of 2016, we conducted an aerial survey over the ice-covered areas of the Chukchi Sea using thermal and color cameras to detect and count these seals on sea ice. We related the seal counts to environmental variables, and used the relationships to estimate the species’ distributions and abundance throughout the Chukchi Sea. We accounted for incomplete detection due to seals missed by sensors or image processing errors, behavioral responses to aircraft, or incomplete availability (i.e. seals that are in water or in snow dens on the ice, called lairs). For the latter, we used satellitelinked time-depth recorders and remotely sensed snow melt indices to estimate the proportion of ringed seal individuals that are visible on ice for each day and location surveyed. To our knowledge, this is the first study where use of lairs by ringed seals has been formally addressed while estimating abundance from aerial surveys. Ringed seal abundance was estimated as(95% CI: 478,448–733,929), with highest densities near Kotzebue Sound, Alaska, USA. Bearded seal abundance was estimated as(95% CI: 114,155–190,380), with highest densities in broken pack ice near Bering Strait. The influence of spatial variables, such as snow depth and ice type, was consistent with prior studies of the species’ natural history, particularly ringed seals’ preference for snow of adequate depth for lairs. Our study provides the first comprehensive abundance estimates for ringed and bearded seals in the Chukchi Sea and establishes a reference for monitoring how their populations respond to Arctic warming.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory