Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica

This study investigated the diet and patterns in occurrence of haul-out sites of Weddell seals along the Mawson coast of East Antarctica. Seats of Weddell seals (n = 303) were collected from 139 seal haul-out sites along 250 km of coast between Fold Island (Kemp Land coast - 66.83°S, 58.79°E) and Au...

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Main Author: Pike, RJ
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21221/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21221/1/whole_PikeRhondaJane2006_thesis.pdf
id ftunivtasmania:oai:eprints.utas.edu.au:21221
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints
op_collection_id ftunivtasmania
language English
topic Weddell seal
spellingShingle Weddell seal
Pike, RJ
Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica
topic_facet Weddell seal
description This study investigated the diet and patterns in occurrence of haul-out sites of Weddell seals along the Mawson coast of East Antarctica. Seats of Weddell seals (n = 303) were collected from 139 seal haul-out sites along 250 km of coast between Fold Island (Kemp Land coast - 66.83°S, 58.79°E) and Auster Islands (MacRobertson Land coast - 67°25'S, 63°50'E) during 1998 to 2000. Identification of species-specific hard parts from the seats found eighteen species of fish, two species of octopod, two species of squid, and four species of crustaceans. Randomisation analyses were used to determine associations between abundance of primary prey species and year, season, geographic location and water depth at the sample collection site. No significant interannual variation was found, but the diet varied seasonally, as the squid Psychroteuthis glacialis featured more in the diet in the early summer months compared to winter. Larger beaks of this squid were found in seats collected from ice over deeper waters. The diet of Weddell seals along the Mawson coast is therefore more diverse than reported for other parts of Antarctica and the diet also varies seasonally and with changing bathymetry. The diversity in diet may be attributed to the complex seafloor topography along the coast, allowing seals to forage within a wide range of habitats at different depths. For the investigation into patterns in occurrence of haul-out sites, three study areas were established in 2000 at different locations along the Mawson coast. One study area (Macey) had a high concentration of icebergs and islands, another area (Mawson) had islands near the coast and fewer icebergs, and the third area (Colbeck) had very few icebergs and no islands. Within each study area, there were two transects (1500m wide, 1500m apart) extending 20km north over the sea ice from the coast. Each study area was surveyed three times - in winter (late July), late winter (mid September) and spring (midOctober). Non-parametric tests were used to examine variation in density of haul-out sites and density of seals with respect to distance to coast, between areas and between survey periods. During the 3 surveys, 349 seals were observed amongst 165 sites across all 3 areas. Friedman tests found no significant association of number of seal sites or number of seals with distance to coast. Kruskall-Wallis tests found significant variation between the three areas within each survey period; Macey consistently had more sites than the other two areas. Friedman tests tested for temporal variation within each area, however no significant changes in number of seal sites or number of individual seals were detected. Although not formally tested due to small sample sizes, there appeared to be no. spatial separation of sexes. Weddell seal holes were also used by emperor penguins in the Macey and Colbeck areas and by crabeater seals in the Macey area. This study implies that haul-out sites are not randomly distributed at the local scale (with differences shown between different areas along the coast, ie, regional scale) and that number of sites and number of seals hauled out on ice or seen in holes increases from winter into the breeding season. The results suggest that density of seal sites in the fast ice areas off the MacRobertson Land coast is affected by environmental factors such as bathymetry and presence of icebergs. This study suggests that local bathymetric features have an important influence on the biology of Weddell seals in the Mawson area. Changing bathymetry is associated with variation in diet. Water depth can also influence grounding of icebergs and ocean currents that affect the physical structure and cracking of the sea ice, enabling Weddell seals to access the ice surface to breathe and to haul-out for resting and pupping.
format Thesis
author Pike, RJ
author_facet Pike, RJ
author_sort Pike, RJ
title Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica
title_short Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica
title_full Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica
title_fullStr Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica
title_sort aspects of the ecology of weddell seals leptonychotes weddellii along the mawson coastline, east antarctica
publishDate 2006
url https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21221/
https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21221/1/whole_PikeRhondaJane2006_thesis.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(57.500,57.500,-67.500,-67.500)
ENVELOPE(-59.467,-59.467,-63.817,-63.817)
ENVELOPE(65.000,65.000,-70.000,-70.000)
ENVELOPE(63.000,63.000,-68.000,-68.000)
ENVELOPE(-158.017,-158.017,-77.117,-77.117)
ENVELOPE(65.317,65.317,-69.867,-69.867)
ENVELOPE(63.826,63.826,-67.419,-67.419)
ENVELOPE(59.383,59.383,-67.300,-67.300)
geographic East Antarctica
Weddell
Kemp Land
Auster
MacRobertson Land
Mawson Coast
Colbeck
Macey
Auster Islands
Fold Island
geographic_facet East Antarctica
Weddell
Kemp Land
Auster
MacRobertson Land
Mawson Coast
Colbeck
Macey
Auster Islands
Fold Island
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
Auster Islands
Crabeater Seals
East Antarctica
Emperor penguins
Fold Island
Kemp Land
MacRobertson Land
Sea ice
Weddell Seal
Weddell Seals
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
Auster Islands
Crabeater Seals
East Antarctica
Emperor penguins
Fold Island
Kemp Land
MacRobertson Land
Sea ice
Weddell Seal
Weddell Seals
op_relation https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21221/1/whole_PikeRhondaJane2006_thesis.pdf
Pike, RJ 2006 , 'Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica', Coursework Master thesis, University of Tasmania.
op_rights cc_utas
_version_ 1766276107165761536
spelling ftunivtasmania:oai:eprints.utas.edu.au:21221 2023-05-15T14:04:47+02:00 Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica Pike, RJ 2006 application/pdf https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21221/ https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21221/1/whole_PikeRhondaJane2006_thesis.pdf en eng https://eprints.utas.edu.au/21221/1/whole_PikeRhondaJane2006_thesis.pdf Pike, RJ 2006 , 'Aspects of the ecology of Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii along the Mawson Coastline, East Antarctica', Coursework Master thesis, University of Tasmania. cc_utas Weddell seal Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2006 ftunivtasmania 2020-05-30T07:35:36Z This study investigated the diet and patterns in occurrence of haul-out sites of Weddell seals along the Mawson coast of East Antarctica. Seats of Weddell seals (n = 303) were collected from 139 seal haul-out sites along 250 km of coast between Fold Island (Kemp Land coast - 66.83°S, 58.79°E) and Auster Islands (MacRobertson Land coast - 67°25'S, 63°50'E) during 1998 to 2000. Identification of species-specific hard parts from the seats found eighteen species of fish, two species of octopod, two species of squid, and four species of crustaceans. Randomisation analyses were used to determine associations between abundance of primary prey species and year, season, geographic location and water depth at the sample collection site. No significant interannual variation was found, but the diet varied seasonally, as the squid Psychroteuthis glacialis featured more in the diet in the early summer months compared to winter. Larger beaks of this squid were found in seats collected from ice over deeper waters. The diet of Weddell seals along the Mawson coast is therefore more diverse than reported for other parts of Antarctica and the diet also varies seasonally and with changing bathymetry. The diversity in diet may be attributed to the complex seafloor topography along the coast, allowing seals to forage within a wide range of habitats at different depths. For the investigation into patterns in occurrence of haul-out sites, three study areas were established in 2000 at different locations along the Mawson coast. One study area (Macey) had a high concentration of icebergs and islands, another area (Mawson) had islands near the coast and fewer icebergs, and the third area (Colbeck) had very few icebergs and no islands. Within each study area, there were two transects (1500m wide, 1500m apart) extending 20km north over the sea ice from the coast. Each study area was surveyed three times - in winter (late July), late winter (mid September) and spring (midOctober). Non-parametric tests were used to examine variation in density of haul-out sites and density of seals with respect to distance to coast, between areas and between survey periods. During the 3 surveys, 349 seals were observed amongst 165 sites across all 3 areas. Friedman tests found no significant association of number of seal sites or number of seals with distance to coast. Kruskall-Wallis tests found significant variation between the three areas within each survey period; Macey consistently had more sites than the other two areas. Friedman tests tested for temporal variation within each area, however no significant changes in number of seal sites or number of individual seals were detected. Although not formally tested due to small sample sizes, there appeared to be no. spatial separation of sexes. Weddell seal holes were also used by emperor penguins in the Macey and Colbeck areas and by crabeater seals in the Macey area. This study implies that haul-out sites are not randomly distributed at the local scale (with differences shown between different areas along the coast, ie, regional scale) and that number of sites and number of seals hauled out on ice or seen in holes increases from winter into the breeding season. The results suggest that density of seal sites in the fast ice areas off the MacRobertson Land coast is affected by environmental factors such as bathymetry and presence of icebergs. This study suggests that local bathymetric features have an important influence on the biology of Weddell seals in the Mawson area. Changing bathymetry is associated with variation in diet. Water depth can also influence grounding of icebergs and ocean currents that affect the physical structure and cracking of the sea ice, enabling Weddell seals to access the ice surface to breathe and to haul-out for resting and pupping. Thesis Antarc* Antarctica Auster Islands Crabeater Seals East Antarctica Emperor penguins Fold Island Kemp Land MacRobertson Land Sea ice Weddell Seal Weddell Seals University of Tasmania: UTas ePrints East Antarctica Weddell Kemp Land ENVELOPE(57.500,57.500,-67.500,-67.500) Auster ENVELOPE(-59.467,-59.467,-63.817,-63.817) MacRobertson Land ENVELOPE(65.000,65.000,-70.000,-70.000) Mawson Coast ENVELOPE(63.000,63.000,-68.000,-68.000) Colbeck ENVELOPE(-158.017,-158.017,-77.117,-77.117) Macey ENVELOPE(65.317,65.317,-69.867,-69.867) Auster Islands ENVELOPE(63.826,63.826,-67.419,-67.419) Fold Island ENVELOPE(59.383,59.383,-67.300,-67.300)