MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)

This study presents the first direct observations of the movements and behaviour of free-ranging grey seals at sea. Radio and ultrasonic transmitters were attached to three sub-adult male grey seals which were then tracked from a suitable vessel. Behaviour at sea fell into one of three categories: t...

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Main Authors: THOMPSON, D, HAMMOND, P S, NICHOLAS, K S, FEDAK, M A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1991
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/39d7b322-2252-4ca0-a85c-2922d1a2df0c
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author THOMPSON, D
HAMMOND, P S
NICHOLAS, K S
FEDAK, M A
author_facet THOMPSON, D
HAMMOND, P S
NICHOLAS, K S
FEDAK, M A
author_sort THOMPSON, D
collection University of St Andrews: Research Portal
description This study presents the first direct observations of the movements and behaviour of free-ranging grey seals at sea. Radio and ultrasonic transmitters were attached to three sub-adult male grey seals which were then tracked from a suitable vessel. Behaviour at sea fell into one of three categories: travelling between haul-outs, short duration trips, and resting adjacent to haul-out sites. Travelling was characterized by direct, relatively fast horizontal movement and by V-shaped dive profiles. During short duration trips the seals swam slower and invariably exhibited square-wave dive profiles, spending approximately 60% of total dive duration at the maximum depth. Resting involved shallow dives close to haul-out sites and an absence of directed lateral movement. The excellent navigational abilities of grey seals are illustrated by the rapid, direct swimming between distant haul-out sites. It is proposed that short duration trips are specifically for foraging because of their association with other piscivores, and because swimming was slow and mostly on or near the sea bed (grey seals are known to feed almost exclusively on demersal and benthic fish). These trips accounted for only 14% of the nine days that seal 1 was tracked. It is also proposed that the habit of diving of the sea bed whilst travelling between distant haul-out sites is to allow opportunistic foraging with only a small increase in total swimming distance.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Elephant Seals
genre_facet Elephant Seals
id ftunstandrewcris:oai:research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/39d7b322-2252-4ca0-a85c-2922d1a2df0c
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftunstandrewcris
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_source THOMPSON , D , HAMMOND , P S , NICHOLAS , K S & FEDAK , M A 1991 , ' MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS) ' , Journal of Zoology , vol. 224 , pp. 223-232 .
publishDate 1991
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spelling ftunstandrewcris:oai:research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/39d7b322-2252-4ca0-a85c-2922d1a2df0c 2025-02-23T14:47:29+00:00 MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS) THOMPSON, D HAMMOND, P S NICHOLAS, K S FEDAK, M A 1991-06 https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/39d7b322-2252-4ca0-a85c-2922d1a2df0c eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess THOMPSON , D , HAMMOND , P S , NICHOLAS , K S & FEDAK , M A 1991 , ' MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS) ' , Journal of Zoology , vol. 224 , pp. 223-232 . ELEPHANT SEALS article 1991 ftunstandrewcris 2025-01-24T05:31:12Z This study presents the first direct observations of the movements and behaviour of free-ranging grey seals at sea. Radio and ultrasonic transmitters were attached to three sub-adult male grey seals which were then tracked from a suitable vessel. Behaviour at sea fell into one of three categories: travelling between haul-outs, short duration trips, and resting adjacent to haul-out sites. Travelling was characterized by direct, relatively fast horizontal movement and by V-shaped dive profiles. During short duration trips the seals swam slower and invariably exhibited square-wave dive profiles, spending approximately 60% of total dive duration at the maximum depth. Resting involved shallow dives close to haul-out sites and an absence of directed lateral movement. The excellent navigational abilities of grey seals are illustrated by the rapid, direct swimming between distant haul-out sites. It is proposed that short duration trips are specifically for foraging because of their association with other piscivores, and because swimming was slow and mostly on or near the sea bed (grey seals are known to feed almost exclusively on demersal and benthic fish). These trips accounted for only 14% of the nine days that seal 1 was tracked. It is also proposed that the habit of diving of the sea bed whilst travelling between distant haul-out sites is to allow opportunistic foraging with only a small increase in total swimming distance. Article in Journal/Newspaper Elephant Seals University of St Andrews: Research Portal
spellingShingle ELEPHANT SEALS
THOMPSON, D
HAMMOND, P S
NICHOLAS, K S
FEDAK, M A
MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_full MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_fullStr MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_full_unstemmed MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_short MOVEMENTS, DIVING AND FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_sort movements, diving and foraging behavior of gray seals (halichoerus-grypus)
topic ELEPHANT SEALS
topic_facet ELEPHANT SEALS
url https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/39d7b322-2252-4ca0-a85c-2922d1a2df0c