Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters

Understanding the role of marine mammals in specific ecosystems and their interactions with fisheries involves, inter alia, an understanding of their diet and dietary requirements. In this thesis, the foraging ecology of seven marine mammal species that regularly occur in Irish waters was investigat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hernández-Milián, Gema
Other Authors: Rogan, Emer, Reid, David
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University College Cork 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1979
id ftunivcollcork:oai:cora.ucc.ie:10468/1979
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivcollcork:oai:cora.ucc.ie:10468/1979 2023-08-27T04:09:51+02:00 Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters Hernández-Milián, Gema Rogan, Emer Reid, David 2014 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1979 en eng University College Cork Hernández-Milián, G. 2014. Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters. PhD Thesis, University College Cork. 403 http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1979 © 2014, Gema Hernández-Milián. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ Striped dolphin Atlantic white-sided dolphin White-beaked dolphin Bottlenose dolphin Harbour porpoise Harbour seal Grey seal Trisopterus spp Fisheries Irish waters ECOPATH Doctoral thesis Doctoral PhD (Science) 2014 ftunivcollcork 2023-08-06T14:29:58Z Understanding the role of marine mammals in specific ecosystems and their interactions with fisheries involves, inter alia, an understanding of their diet and dietary requirements. In this thesis, the foraging ecology of seven marine mammal species that regularly occur in Irish waters was investigated by reconstructing diet using hard parts from digestive tracts and scats. Of the species examined, two (striped and Atlantic white-sided dolphin) can be considered offshore species or species inhabiting neritic waters, while five others usually inhabit more coastal areas (white-beaked dolphin, harbour porpoise, harbour seal and grey seal); the last species studied was the bottlenose dolphin whose population structure is more complex, with coastal and offshore populations. A total of 13,028 prey items from at least 81 different species (62 fish species, 14 cephalopods, four crustaceans, and a tunicate) were identified. 28% of the fish species were identified using bones other than otoliths, highlighting the importance of using all identifiable structures to reconstruct diet. Individually, each species of marine mammal presented a high diversity of prey taxa, but the locally abundant Trisopterus spp. were found to be the most important prey item for all species, indicating that Trisopterus spp. is probably a key species in understanding the role of these predators in Irish waters. In the coastal marine mammals, other Gadiformes species (haddock, pollack, saithe, whiting) also contributed substantially to the diet; in contrast, in pelagic or less coastal marine mammals, prey was largely comprised of planktivorous fish, such as Atlantic mackerel, horse mackerel, blue whiting, and mesopelagic prey. Striped dolphins and Atlantic white-sided dolphins are offshore small cetaceans foraging in neritic waters. Differences between the diet of striped dolphins collected in drift nets targeting tuna and stranded on Irish coasts showed a complex foraging behaviour; the diet information shows that although this dolphin forages ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Harbour porpoise harbour seal White-beaked dolphin University College Cork, Ireland: Cork Open Research Archive (CORA) Porpoise Harbour ENVELOPE(-130.304,-130.304,54.231,54.231)
institution Open Polar
collection University College Cork, Ireland: Cork Open Research Archive (CORA)
op_collection_id ftunivcollcork
language English
topic Striped dolphin
Atlantic white-sided dolphin
White-beaked dolphin
Bottlenose dolphin
Harbour porpoise
Harbour seal
Grey seal
Trisopterus spp
Fisheries
Irish waters
ECOPATH
spellingShingle Striped dolphin
Atlantic white-sided dolphin
White-beaked dolphin
Bottlenose dolphin
Harbour porpoise
Harbour seal
Grey seal
Trisopterus spp
Fisheries
Irish waters
ECOPATH
Hernández-Milián, Gema
Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters
topic_facet Striped dolphin
Atlantic white-sided dolphin
White-beaked dolphin
Bottlenose dolphin
Harbour porpoise
Harbour seal
Grey seal
Trisopterus spp
Fisheries
Irish waters
ECOPATH
description Understanding the role of marine mammals in specific ecosystems and their interactions with fisheries involves, inter alia, an understanding of their diet and dietary requirements. In this thesis, the foraging ecology of seven marine mammal species that regularly occur in Irish waters was investigated by reconstructing diet using hard parts from digestive tracts and scats. Of the species examined, two (striped and Atlantic white-sided dolphin) can be considered offshore species or species inhabiting neritic waters, while five others usually inhabit more coastal areas (white-beaked dolphin, harbour porpoise, harbour seal and grey seal); the last species studied was the bottlenose dolphin whose population structure is more complex, with coastal and offshore populations. A total of 13,028 prey items from at least 81 different species (62 fish species, 14 cephalopods, four crustaceans, and a tunicate) were identified. 28% of the fish species were identified using bones other than otoliths, highlighting the importance of using all identifiable structures to reconstruct diet. Individually, each species of marine mammal presented a high diversity of prey taxa, but the locally abundant Trisopterus spp. were found to be the most important prey item for all species, indicating that Trisopterus spp. is probably a key species in understanding the role of these predators in Irish waters. In the coastal marine mammals, other Gadiformes species (haddock, pollack, saithe, whiting) also contributed substantially to the diet; in contrast, in pelagic or less coastal marine mammals, prey was largely comprised of planktivorous fish, such as Atlantic mackerel, horse mackerel, blue whiting, and mesopelagic prey. Striped dolphins and Atlantic white-sided dolphins are offshore small cetaceans foraging in neritic waters. Differences between the diet of striped dolphins collected in drift nets targeting tuna and stranded on Irish coasts showed a complex foraging behaviour; the diet information shows that although this dolphin forages ...
author2 Rogan, Emer
Reid, David
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Hernández-Milián, Gema
author_facet Hernández-Milián, Gema
author_sort Hernández-Milián, Gema
title Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters
title_short Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters
title_full Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters
title_fullStr Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters
title_full_unstemmed Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters
title_sort trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in irish waters
publisher University College Cork
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1979
long_lat ENVELOPE(-130.304,-130.304,54.231,54.231)
geographic Porpoise Harbour
geographic_facet Porpoise Harbour
genre Harbour porpoise
harbour seal
White-beaked dolphin
genre_facet Harbour porpoise
harbour seal
White-beaked dolphin
op_relation Hernández-Milián, G. 2014. Trophic role of small cetaceans and seals in Irish waters. PhD Thesis, University College Cork.
403
http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1979
op_rights © 2014, Gema Hernández-Milián.
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
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