SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)

Three types of Argos satellite transmitter were attached to grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) at Donna Nook (South Humberside, UK) between 1985 and 1989 in order to investigate their movements. With the first two transmitters (A and B) the entire package was attached to the seal's back. Seal A wa...

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Main Authors: MCCONNELL, B J, CHAMBERS, C, NICHOLAS, K S, FEDAK, M A
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/dd5be464-b92d-4e02-9afb-7f22721e885c
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author MCCONNELL, B J
CHAMBERS, C
NICHOLAS, K S
FEDAK, M A
author_facet MCCONNELL, B J
CHAMBERS, C
NICHOLAS, K S
FEDAK, M A
author_sort MCCONNELL, B J
collection University of St Andrews: Research Portal
description Three types of Argos satellite transmitter were attached to grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) at Donna Nook (South Humberside, UK) between 1985 and 1989 in order to investigate their movements. With the first two transmitters (A and B) the entire package was attached to the seal's back. Seal A was tracked for 29 days but although it was located on sandbanks up to 150 km south-east of Donna Nook, no locations were obtained at sea. Transmitters B and C used a submergence sensor to regulate transmissions. Seal B was tracked for 51 days and remained within 40 km of Donna Nook. A few locations were obtained at sea but all within 10 km of Donna Nook. Transmitter C incorporated a head-mounted aerial in order to increase the number of location fixes when the seal was at sea. This seal was tracked for 111 days, producing an average of 9.1 location fixes per day while at sea. It used two sites 265 km apart and undertook three transits between them. On the second visit to the northern site it made several trips up to 55 km out to sea. The majority of the remainder of the time was spent within 10 km of the haulout sites. Estimates of swimming speed were consistent with values required for minimum cost of transport.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Phoca vitulina
genre_facet Phoca vitulina
id ftunstandrewcris:oai:research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/dd5be464-b92d-4e02-9afb-7f22721e885c
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftunstandrewcris
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_source MCCONNELL , B J , CHAMBERS , C , NICHOLAS , K S & FEDAK , M A 1992 , ' SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS) ' , Journal of Zoology , vol. 226 , pp. 271-282 .
publishDate 1992
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spelling ftunstandrewcris:oai:research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/dd5be464-b92d-4e02-9afb-7f22721e885c 2025-02-16T15:09:17+00:00 SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS) MCCONNELL, B J CHAMBERS, C NICHOLAS, K S FEDAK, M A 1992-02 https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/dd5be464-b92d-4e02-9afb-7f22721e885c eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess MCCONNELL , B J , CHAMBERS , C , NICHOLAS , K S & FEDAK , M A 1992 , ' SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS) ' , Journal of Zoology , vol. 226 , pp. 271-282 . PHOCA-VITULINA FUR article 1992 ftunstandrewcris 2025-01-24T05:31:12Z Three types of Argos satellite transmitter were attached to grey seals (Halichoerus grypus) at Donna Nook (South Humberside, UK) between 1985 and 1989 in order to investigate their movements. With the first two transmitters (A and B) the entire package was attached to the seal's back. Seal A was tracked for 29 days but although it was located on sandbanks up to 150 km south-east of Donna Nook, no locations were obtained at sea. Transmitters B and C used a submergence sensor to regulate transmissions. Seal B was tracked for 51 days and remained within 40 km of Donna Nook. A few locations were obtained at sea but all within 10 km of Donna Nook. Transmitter C incorporated a head-mounted aerial in order to increase the number of location fixes when the seal was at sea. This seal was tracked for 111 days, producing an average of 9.1 location fixes per day while at sea. It used two sites 265 km apart and undertook three transits between them. On the second visit to the northern site it made several trips up to 55 km out to sea. The majority of the remainder of the time was spent within 10 km of the haulout sites. Estimates of swimming speed were consistent with values required for minimum cost of transport. Article in Journal/Newspaper Phoca vitulina University of St Andrews: Research Portal
spellingShingle PHOCA-VITULINA
FUR
MCCONNELL, B J
CHAMBERS, C
NICHOLAS, K S
FEDAK, M A
SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_full SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_fullStr SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_full_unstemmed SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_short SATELLITE TRACKING OF GRAY SEALS (HALICHOERUS-GRYPUS)
title_sort satellite tracking of gray seals (halichoerus-grypus)
topic PHOCA-VITULINA
FUR
topic_facet PHOCA-VITULINA
FUR
url https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/dd5be464-b92d-4e02-9afb-7f22721e885c