Abandoned Elephant Seal Colonies in Antarctica: Integration of Genetic, Isotopic, and Geologic Approaches toward Understanding Holocene Environmental Change

Abstract: During previous NSF-sponsored research, the PI's discovered that southern elephant seal colonies once existed along the Victoria Land coast (VLC) of Antarctica, a region where they are no longer observed. Molted seal skin and hair occur along 300 km of coastline, more than 1000 km fro...

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Main Author: Koch, Paul
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: IEDA: US Antarctic Program Data Center 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://get.iedadata.org/metadata/iso/600041
id dataone:http://get.iedadata.org/metadata/iso/600041
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection IEDA: US Antarctic Program Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:IEDA_USAP
language unknown
topic Isotope
Penguin
Seals
Antarctic Earth Sciences
Antarctic Organisms and Ecosystems
Biology
Southern Ocean
Biosphere
Ross Sea
US Antarctic Program Data Center (USAP-DC)
spellingShingle Isotope
Penguin
Seals
Antarctic Earth Sciences
Antarctic Organisms and Ecosystems
Biology
Southern Ocean
Biosphere
Ross Sea
US Antarctic Program Data Center (USAP-DC)
Koch, Paul
Abandoned Elephant Seal Colonies in Antarctica: Integration of Genetic, Isotopic, and Geologic Approaches toward Understanding Holocene Environmental Change
topic_facet Isotope
Penguin
Seals
Antarctic Earth Sciences
Antarctic Organisms and Ecosystems
Biology
Southern Ocean
Biosphere
Ross Sea
US Antarctic Program Data Center (USAP-DC)
description Abstract: During previous NSF-sponsored research, the PI's discovered that southern elephant seal colonies once existed along the Victoria Land coast (VLC) of Antarctica, a region where they are no longer observed. Molted seal skin and hair occur along 300 km of coastline, more than 1000 km from any extant colony. The last record of a seal at a former colony site is at ~A.D. 1600. Because abandonment occurred prior to subantarctic sealing, disappearance of the VLC colony probably was due to environmental factors, possibly cooling and encroachment of land-fast, perennial sea ice that made access to haul-out sites difficult. The record of seal inhabitation along the VLC, therefore, has potential as a proxy for climate change. Elephant seals are a predominantly subantarctic species with circumpolar distribution. Genetic studies have revealed significant differentiation among populations, particularly with regard to that at Macquarie I., which is the extant population nearest to the abandoned VLC colony. Not only is the Macquarie population unique genetically, but it is has undergone unexplained decline of 2%/yr over the last 50 years3. In a pilot study, genetic analyses showed a close relationship between the VLC seals and those at Macquarie I. An understanding of the relationship between the two populations, as well as of the environmental pressures that led to the demise of the VLC colonies, will provide a better understanding of present-day population genetic structure, the effect of environmental change on seal populations, and possibly the reasons underlying the modern decline at Macquarie Island. This project addresses several key research problems: (1) Why did elephant seals colonize and then abandon the VLC? (2) What does the elephant seal record reveal about Holocene climate change and sea-ice conditions? (3) What were the foraging strategies of the seals and did these strategies change over time as climate varied? (4) How does the genetic structure of the VLC seals relate to extant populations? (5) How did genetic diversity change over time and with colony decline? (6) Using ancient samples to estimate mtDNA mutation rates, what can be learned about VLC population dynamics over time? (7) What was the ecological relationship between elephant seals and Adelie penguins that occupied the same sites, but apparently at different times? The proposed work includes the professional training of young researchers and incorporation of data into graduate and undergraduate courses. Because of extreme isolation of the Antarctic continent since the Early Oligocene, one expects a unique invertebrate benthic fauna with a high degree of endemism. Yet some invertebrate taxa that constitute important ecological components of sedimentary benthic communities include more than 40 percent non-endemic species (e.g., benthic polychaetes). To account for non-endemic species, intermittent genetic exchange must occur between Antarctic and other (e.g. South American) populations. The most likely mechanism for such gene flow, at least for in-faunal and mobile macrobenthos, is dispersal of planktonic larvae across the sub- Antarctic and Antarctic polar fronts. To test for larval dispersal as a mechanism of maintaining genetic continuity across polar fronts, the scientists propose to (1) take plankton samples along transects across Drake passage during both the austral summer and winter seasons while concurrently collecting the appropriate hydrographic data. Such data will help elucidate the hydrographic mechanisms that allow dispersal across Drake Passage. Using a molecular phylogenetic approach, they will (2) compare seemingly identical adult forms from Antarctic and South America continents to identify genetic breaks, historical gene flow, and control for the presence of cryptic species. (3) Similar molecular tools will be used to relate planktonic larvae to their adult forms. Through this procedure, they propose to link the larval forms respectively to their Antarctic or South America origins. The proposed work builds on previous research that provides the basis for this effort to develop a synthetic understanding of historical gene flow and present day dispersal mechanism in South American/Drake Passage/ Antarctic Peninsular region. Furthermore, this work represents one of the first attempts to examine recent gene flow in Antarctic benthic invertebrates. Graduate students and a postdoctoral fellow will be trained during this research
format Dataset
author Koch, Paul
author_facet Koch, Paul
author_sort Koch, Paul
title Abandoned Elephant Seal Colonies in Antarctica: Integration of Genetic, Isotopic, and Geologic Approaches toward Understanding Holocene Environmental Change
title_short Abandoned Elephant Seal Colonies in Antarctica: Integration of Genetic, Isotopic, and Geologic Approaches toward Understanding Holocene Environmental Change
title_full Abandoned Elephant Seal Colonies in Antarctica: Integration of Genetic, Isotopic, and Geologic Approaches toward Understanding Holocene Environmental Change
title_fullStr Abandoned Elephant Seal Colonies in Antarctica: Integration of Genetic, Isotopic, and Geologic Approaches toward Understanding Holocene Environmental Change
title_full_unstemmed Abandoned Elephant Seal Colonies in Antarctica: Integration of Genetic, Isotopic, and Geologic Approaches toward Understanding Holocene Environmental Change
title_sort abandoned elephant seal colonies in antarctica: integration of genetic, isotopic, and geologic approaches toward understanding holocene environmental change
publisher IEDA: US Antarctic Program Data Center
publishDate 2010
url http://get.iedadata.org/metadata/iso/600041
op_coverage ENVELOPE(162.0,168.0,-72.0,-78.0)
BEGINDATE: 2005-09-15T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2009-08-31T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(162.0,168.0,-72.0,-78.0)
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Austral
Ross Sea
Victoria Land
Drake Passage
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Austral
Ross Sea
Victoria Land
Drake Passage
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Drake Passage
Elephant Seal
Elephant Seals
Macquarie Island
Ross Sea
Sea ice
Southern Elephant Seal
Southern Ocean
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Drake Passage
Elephant Seal
Elephant Seals
Macquarie Island
Ross Sea
Sea ice
Southern Elephant Seal
Southern Ocean
Victoria Land
_version_ 1800873380860133376
spelling dataone:http://get.iedadata.org/metadata/iso/600041 2024-06-03T18:46:24+00:00 Abandoned Elephant Seal Colonies in Antarctica: Integration of Genetic, Isotopic, and Geologic Approaches toward Understanding Holocene Environmental Change Koch, Paul ENVELOPE(162.0,168.0,-72.0,-78.0) BEGINDATE: 2005-09-15T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2009-08-31T00:00:00Z 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z http://get.iedadata.org/metadata/iso/600041 unknown IEDA: US Antarctic Program Data Center Isotope Penguin Seals Antarctic Earth Sciences Antarctic Organisms and Ecosystems Biology Southern Ocean Biosphere Ross Sea US Antarctic Program Data Center (USAP-DC) Dataset 2010 dataone:urn:node:IEDA_USAP 2024-06-03T18:11:58Z Abstract: During previous NSF-sponsored research, the PI's discovered that southern elephant seal colonies once existed along the Victoria Land coast (VLC) of Antarctica, a region where they are no longer observed. Molted seal skin and hair occur along 300 km of coastline, more than 1000 km from any extant colony. The last record of a seal at a former colony site is at ~A.D. 1600. Because abandonment occurred prior to subantarctic sealing, disappearance of the VLC colony probably was due to environmental factors, possibly cooling and encroachment of land-fast, perennial sea ice that made access to haul-out sites difficult. The record of seal inhabitation along the VLC, therefore, has potential as a proxy for climate change. Elephant seals are a predominantly subantarctic species with circumpolar distribution. Genetic studies have revealed significant differentiation among populations, particularly with regard to that at Macquarie I., which is the extant population nearest to the abandoned VLC colony. Not only is the Macquarie population unique genetically, but it is has undergone unexplained decline of 2%/yr over the last 50 years3. In a pilot study, genetic analyses showed a close relationship between the VLC seals and those at Macquarie I. An understanding of the relationship between the two populations, as well as of the environmental pressures that led to the demise of the VLC colonies, will provide a better understanding of present-day population genetic structure, the effect of environmental change on seal populations, and possibly the reasons underlying the modern decline at Macquarie Island. This project addresses several key research problems: (1) Why did elephant seals colonize and then abandon the VLC? (2) What does the elephant seal record reveal about Holocene climate change and sea-ice conditions? (3) What were the foraging strategies of the seals and did these strategies change over time as climate varied? (4) How does the genetic structure of the VLC seals relate to extant populations? (5) How did genetic diversity change over time and with colony decline? (6) Using ancient samples to estimate mtDNA mutation rates, what can be learned about VLC population dynamics over time? (7) What was the ecological relationship between elephant seals and Adelie penguins that occupied the same sites, but apparently at different times? The proposed work includes the professional training of young researchers and incorporation of data into graduate and undergraduate courses. Because of extreme isolation of the Antarctic continent since the Early Oligocene, one expects a unique invertebrate benthic fauna with a high degree of endemism. Yet some invertebrate taxa that constitute important ecological components of sedimentary benthic communities include more than 40 percent non-endemic species (e.g., benthic polychaetes). To account for non-endemic species, intermittent genetic exchange must occur between Antarctic and other (e.g. South American) populations. The most likely mechanism for such gene flow, at least for in-faunal and mobile macrobenthos, is dispersal of planktonic larvae across the sub- Antarctic and Antarctic polar fronts. To test for larval dispersal as a mechanism of maintaining genetic continuity across polar fronts, the scientists propose to (1) take plankton samples along transects across Drake passage during both the austral summer and winter seasons while concurrently collecting the appropriate hydrographic data. Such data will help elucidate the hydrographic mechanisms that allow dispersal across Drake Passage. Using a molecular phylogenetic approach, they will (2) compare seemingly identical adult forms from Antarctic and South America continents to identify genetic breaks, historical gene flow, and control for the presence of cryptic species. (3) Similar molecular tools will be used to relate planktonic larvae to their adult forms. Through this procedure, they propose to link the larval forms respectively to their Antarctic or South America origins. The proposed work builds on previous research that provides the basis for this effort to develop a synthetic understanding of historical gene flow and present day dispersal mechanism in South American/Drake Passage/ Antarctic Peninsular region. Furthermore, this work represents one of the first attempts to examine recent gene flow in Antarctic benthic invertebrates. Graduate students and a postdoctoral fellow will be trained during this research Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Drake Passage Elephant Seal Elephant Seals Macquarie Island Ross Sea Sea ice Southern Elephant Seal Southern Ocean Victoria Land IEDA: US Antarctic Program Data Center (via DataONE) Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Austral Ross Sea Victoria Land Drake Passage ENVELOPE(162.0,168.0,-72.0,-78.0)