Social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay, California

To understand harbor seal social and mating strategies, I examined site fidelity, seasonal abundance and distribution, herd integrity, and underwater behavior of individual harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay. Individual harbor seals (n = 444) were identified by natural markings and represented gr...

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Main Author: Nicholson, Teri Elizabeth
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: San Francisco State University, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/23949
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spelling ftoceandocs:oai:aquadocs.org:1834/23949 2023-05-15T16:33:10+02:00 Social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay, California Nicholson, Teri Elizabeth 2000 application/pdf 98 http://hdl.handle.net/1834/23949 en eng San Francisco State University, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories http://hdl.handle.net/1834/23949 http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/6823 29 2011-10-03 12:15:04 6823 Biology Ecology thesis 2000 ftoceandocs 2023-04-06T17:02:31Z To understand harbor seal social and mating strategies, I examined site fidelity, seasonal abundance and distribution, herd integrity, and underwater behavior of individual harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay. Individual harbor seals (n = 444) were identified by natural markings and represented greater than 80% of an estimated 520 seals within this community. Year to year fidelity of individual harbor seals to southern Monterey Bay coastline was 84% (n = 388), and long-term associations (>2 yrs) among individuals were common (>40%). Consistent with these long-term associations, harbor seals were highly social underwater throughout the year. Underwater social behavior included three primary types: (1) visual and acoustic displays, such as vocalizing, surface splashing, and bubble-blowing; (2) playful or agonistic social behavior such as rolling, mounting, attending, and biting; and (3) signal gestures such as head-thrusting, fore-flipper scratch~ng, and growling. Frequency of these types of behavior was related to seal age, gender, season, and resource availability. Underwater behavior had a variety of functions, including promotion of learning and social development, reduction of aggression and preservation of social bonds by maintaining social hierarchy, and facilitation of mate selection during breeding season. Social behavior among adult males was significantly correlated with vocalization characteristics (r = 0.99, X2 = 37.7, p = 0.00087), indicating that seals may assess their competition based on underwater vocalization displays and adopt individual strategies for attracting females during breeding season based on social status. Individual mating strategies may include defending underwater territories, using scramble tactics, and developing social alliances.(PDF contains 105 pages) Masters Copyright permission signed by the author is on file with the IAMSLIC archive. Thesis harbor seal IODE-UNESCO: OceanDocs - E-Repository of Ocean Publications
institution Open Polar
collection IODE-UNESCO: OceanDocs - E-Repository of Ocean Publications
op_collection_id ftoceandocs
language English
topic Biology
Ecology
spellingShingle Biology
Ecology
Nicholson, Teri Elizabeth
Social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay, California
topic_facet Biology
Ecology
description To understand harbor seal social and mating strategies, I examined site fidelity, seasonal abundance and distribution, herd integrity, and underwater behavior of individual harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay. Individual harbor seals (n = 444) were identified by natural markings and represented greater than 80% of an estimated 520 seals within this community. Year to year fidelity of individual harbor seals to southern Monterey Bay coastline was 84% (n = 388), and long-term associations (>2 yrs) among individuals were common (>40%). Consistent with these long-term associations, harbor seals were highly social underwater throughout the year. Underwater social behavior included three primary types: (1) visual and acoustic displays, such as vocalizing, surface splashing, and bubble-blowing; (2) playful or agonistic social behavior such as rolling, mounting, attending, and biting; and (3) signal gestures such as head-thrusting, fore-flipper scratch~ng, and growling. Frequency of these types of behavior was related to seal age, gender, season, and resource availability. Underwater behavior had a variety of functions, including promotion of learning and social development, reduction of aggression and preservation of social bonds by maintaining social hierarchy, and facilitation of mate selection during breeding season. Social behavior among adult males was significantly correlated with vocalization characteristics (r = 0.99, X2 = 37.7, p = 0.00087), indicating that seals may assess their competition based on underwater vocalization displays and adopt individual strategies for attracting females during breeding season based on social status. Individual mating strategies may include defending underwater territories, using scramble tactics, and developing social alliances.(PDF contains 105 pages) Masters Copyright permission signed by the author is on file with the IAMSLIC archive.
format Thesis
author Nicholson, Teri Elizabeth
author_facet Nicholson, Teri Elizabeth
author_sort Nicholson, Teri Elizabeth
title Social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay, California
title_short Social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay, California
title_full Social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay, California
title_fullStr Social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay, California
title_full_unstemmed Social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern Monterey Bay, California
title_sort social structure and underwater behavior of harbor seals in southern monterey bay, california
publisher San Francisco State University, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories
publishDate 2000
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/23949
genre harbor seal
genre_facet harbor seal
op_source http://aquaticcommons.org/id/eprint/6823
29
2011-10-03 12:15:04
6823
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1834/23949
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