pinniped population monitoring

Año Nuevo Island and the adjacent mainland host a large pinniped colony, including four different species: the northern elephant seal, northern sea lion, California sea lion, and harbor seal. Since 1967, researchers from the University of California, Santa Cruz, and the Smithsonian Institution have...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ano Nuevo Island Reserve, University of California Natural Reserve System, Richard Condit
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5063/AA/nrs.740.1
id dataone:doi:10.5063/AA/nrs.740.1
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:doi:10.5063/AA/nrs.740.1 2024-10-03T18:46:04+00:00 pinniped population monitoring Ano Nuevo Island Reserve University of California Natural Reserve System Richard Condit Año Nuevo Island and adjacent mainland ENVELOPE(-122.3361,-122.3361,37.1083,37.1083) BEGINDATE: 1967-09-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 1967-09-01T00:00:00Z 2007-02-11T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.5063/AA/nrs.740.1 unknown Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity pinniped elephant seal California sea lion harbor seal northern sea lion Steller's sea lion population change population size Dataset 2007 dataone:urn:node:KNB https://doi.org/10.5063/AA/nrs.740.1 2024-10-03T18:02:33Z Año Nuevo Island and the adjacent mainland host a large pinniped colony, including four different species: the northern elephant seal, northern sea lion, California sea lion, and harbor seal. Since 1967, researchers from the University of California, Santa Cruz, and the Smithsonian Institution have been doing regular counts of all individuals of all four throughout the colony; particular attention is focused on counts of breeding females and pups of the elephant seal and northern sea lion. The number of elephant seal pups born annually at Año Nuevo was below 200 in 1968, but grew steadily until 1995; since then it has stabilized at 2600-2800. The number of northern sea lion pups was as high as 400 yearly in the late 1960s, but has fallen to 200-250 since. California sea lions have few pups at Año Nuevo, but they are the most numerous of the four species, with more than 10,000 observed on some occasions. Harbor seals breed routinely on the island, but in small numbers (and breeding females are shy and hard to count). A fifth species, the northern fur seal, was recorded on several occasions in the mid-1970s. Dataset Elephant Seal harbor seal Northern fur seal Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity (via DataONE) ENVELOPE(-122.3361,-122.3361,37.1083,37.1083)
institution Open Polar
collection Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:KNB
language unknown
topic pinniped
elephant seal
California sea lion
harbor seal
northern sea lion
Steller's sea lion
population change
population size
spellingShingle pinniped
elephant seal
California sea lion
harbor seal
northern sea lion
Steller's sea lion
population change
population size
Ano Nuevo Island Reserve
University of California Natural Reserve System
Richard Condit
pinniped population monitoring
topic_facet pinniped
elephant seal
California sea lion
harbor seal
northern sea lion
Steller's sea lion
population change
population size
description Año Nuevo Island and the adjacent mainland host a large pinniped colony, including four different species: the northern elephant seal, northern sea lion, California sea lion, and harbor seal. Since 1967, researchers from the University of California, Santa Cruz, and the Smithsonian Institution have been doing regular counts of all individuals of all four throughout the colony; particular attention is focused on counts of breeding females and pups of the elephant seal and northern sea lion. The number of elephant seal pups born annually at Año Nuevo was below 200 in 1968, but grew steadily until 1995; since then it has stabilized at 2600-2800. The number of northern sea lion pups was as high as 400 yearly in the late 1960s, but has fallen to 200-250 since. California sea lions have few pups at Año Nuevo, but they are the most numerous of the four species, with more than 10,000 observed on some occasions. Harbor seals breed routinely on the island, but in small numbers (and breeding females are shy and hard to count). A fifth species, the northern fur seal, was recorded on several occasions in the mid-1970s.
format Dataset
author Ano Nuevo Island Reserve
University of California Natural Reserve System
Richard Condit
author_facet Ano Nuevo Island Reserve
University of California Natural Reserve System
Richard Condit
author_sort Ano Nuevo Island Reserve
title pinniped population monitoring
title_short pinniped population monitoring
title_full pinniped population monitoring
title_fullStr pinniped population monitoring
title_full_unstemmed pinniped population monitoring
title_sort pinniped population monitoring
publisher Knowledge Network for Biocomplexity
publishDate 2007
url https://doi.org/10.5063/AA/nrs.740.1
op_coverage Año Nuevo Island and adjacent mainland
ENVELOPE(-122.3361,-122.3361,37.1083,37.1083)
BEGINDATE: 1967-09-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 1967-09-01T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-122.3361,-122.3361,37.1083,37.1083)
genre Elephant Seal
harbor seal
Northern fur seal
genre_facet Elephant Seal
harbor seal
Northern fur seal
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5063/AA/nrs.740.1
_version_ 1811923981157007360