Home Ranges and Diving Behavior of New Zealand Sea Lions along the Catlins Coast, South Island, New Zealand

New Zealand sea lions (Phocarctos hookeri) were extirpated from the North and South Islands of New Zealand during pre-European native hunting, and their numbers were greatly reduced on the Auckland and Campbell Islands during European commercial sealing. However, they began reoccupying South Island...

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Main Author: Reed, Nathan Mark
Other Authors: Davis, Randall, Seitz, William, Sterba-Boatwright, Blair, Wursig, Bernd
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/193246
id fttexasamuniv:oai:oaktrust.library.tamu.edu:1969.1/193246
record_format openpolar
spelling fttexasamuniv:oai:oaktrust.library.tamu.edu:1969.1/193246 2023-07-16T03:57:33+02:00 Home Ranges and Diving Behavior of New Zealand Sea Lions along the Catlins Coast, South Island, New Zealand Reed, Nathan Mark Davis, Randall Seitz, William Sterba-Boatwright, Blair Wursig, Bernd 2021-05-20T13:44:08Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/193246 en eng https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/193246 home range sea lion cross-validation foraging physiology diving Thesis text 2021 fttexasamuniv 2023-06-27T22:15:55Z New Zealand sea lions (Phocarctos hookeri) were extirpated from the North and South Islands of New Zealand during pre-European native hunting, and their numbers were greatly reduced on the Auckland and Campbell Islands during European commercial sealing. However, they began reoccupying South Island in 1994, and pup production remains low but steady. The home range, at-sea movements, and diving behavior of females at the breeding colony along the Catlins Coast of South Island have not been studied since its inception in 2006. The goal of the study was to: 1) evaluate the performance of home range models to identify the most accurate model(s) for a semi-aquatic distribution, 2) track movements to identify home ranges, and 3) record diving behavior of females to characterize foraging behavior and estimate energy expenditure. To accomplish this study, we attached satellite telemeters and video and data recorders to females along the Catlins Coast during austral winter of 2019. Home ranges were most accurately modeled by separating inshore and offshore habitats and applying adaptive local convex hulls (LOCOH) and fixed kernel density with plug-in bandwidth selection (PKDE), respectively. This method minimized the ranges outside of used habitat, handled boundaries to movement, and performed accurately in cross-validation evaluation. The results showed the importance of home range model selection. Total home ranges were small and restricted to coastal areas. Foraging cycles were frequent, with short times at sea and onshore. Dives were shallow, short in duration, and divided into three types based on variables derived from three-dimensional dive analysis. Dive characteristics indicated a benthic foraging strategy with transit periods between foraging patches. At-sea estimated metabolic rate varied by activity, with an estimated field metabolic rate lower than that of females at the Auckland Islands, possibly indicating differences in energetic expenditure among populations. It appears that females along the Catlins ... Thesis Auckland Islands Texas A&M University Digital Repository Austral New Zealand Campbell Islands ENVELOPE(-103.668,-103.668,56.984,56.984)
institution Open Polar
collection Texas A&M University Digital Repository
op_collection_id fttexasamuniv
language English
topic home range
sea lion
cross-validation
foraging
physiology
diving
spellingShingle home range
sea lion
cross-validation
foraging
physiology
diving
Reed, Nathan Mark
Home Ranges and Diving Behavior of New Zealand Sea Lions along the Catlins Coast, South Island, New Zealand
topic_facet home range
sea lion
cross-validation
foraging
physiology
diving
description New Zealand sea lions (Phocarctos hookeri) were extirpated from the North and South Islands of New Zealand during pre-European native hunting, and their numbers were greatly reduced on the Auckland and Campbell Islands during European commercial sealing. However, they began reoccupying South Island in 1994, and pup production remains low but steady. The home range, at-sea movements, and diving behavior of females at the breeding colony along the Catlins Coast of South Island have not been studied since its inception in 2006. The goal of the study was to: 1) evaluate the performance of home range models to identify the most accurate model(s) for a semi-aquatic distribution, 2) track movements to identify home ranges, and 3) record diving behavior of females to characterize foraging behavior and estimate energy expenditure. To accomplish this study, we attached satellite telemeters and video and data recorders to females along the Catlins Coast during austral winter of 2019. Home ranges were most accurately modeled by separating inshore and offshore habitats and applying adaptive local convex hulls (LOCOH) and fixed kernel density with plug-in bandwidth selection (PKDE), respectively. This method minimized the ranges outside of used habitat, handled boundaries to movement, and performed accurately in cross-validation evaluation. The results showed the importance of home range model selection. Total home ranges were small and restricted to coastal areas. Foraging cycles were frequent, with short times at sea and onshore. Dives were shallow, short in duration, and divided into three types based on variables derived from three-dimensional dive analysis. Dive characteristics indicated a benthic foraging strategy with transit periods between foraging patches. At-sea estimated metabolic rate varied by activity, with an estimated field metabolic rate lower than that of females at the Auckland Islands, possibly indicating differences in energetic expenditure among populations. It appears that females along the Catlins ...
author2 Davis, Randall
Seitz, William
Sterba-Boatwright, Blair
Wursig, Bernd
format Thesis
author Reed, Nathan Mark
author_facet Reed, Nathan Mark
author_sort Reed, Nathan Mark
title Home Ranges and Diving Behavior of New Zealand Sea Lions along the Catlins Coast, South Island, New Zealand
title_short Home Ranges and Diving Behavior of New Zealand Sea Lions along the Catlins Coast, South Island, New Zealand
title_full Home Ranges and Diving Behavior of New Zealand Sea Lions along the Catlins Coast, South Island, New Zealand
title_fullStr Home Ranges and Diving Behavior of New Zealand Sea Lions along the Catlins Coast, South Island, New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed Home Ranges and Diving Behavior of New Zealand Sea Lions along the Catlins Coast, South Island, New Zealand
title_sort home ranges and diving behavior of new zealand sea lions along the catlins coast, south island, new zealand
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/193246
long_lat ENVELOPE(-103.668,-103.668,56.984,56.984)
geographic Austral
New Zealand
Campbell Islands
geographic_facet Austral
New Zealand
Campbell Islands
genre Auckland Islands
genre_facet Auckland Islands
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/193246
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