Diving behaviour of lactating bearded seals (Erignathus barbatus) in the Svalbard area

This study documents activity patterns and diving behaviour of four bearded seal (Erignathus barbatus)mothers during the lactation period. Depth and velocity were recorded at intervals of 10 s, with a depth resolution of 2 m. The females spent 8 ± 3% (mean ± SD) of their time hauled out on the ice a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kovacs, Kit M., Gjertz, Ian, Haug, Tore, Krafft, Bjørn, Lydersen, Christian
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Norwegian Polar Institute 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://data.npolar.no/dataset/a4419dff-306c-5c3c-beaf-c4d17071a60e
Description
Summary:This study documents activity patterns and diving behaviour of four bearded seal (Erignathus barbatus)mothers during the lactation period. Depth and velocity were recorded at intervals of 10 s, with a depth resolution of 2 m. The females spent 8 ± 3% (mean ± SD) of their time hauled out on the ice and92 ± 3% in the water. Approximately half of their time was spent diving. During the study 15 077 dives were recorded.The duration of dives was 2.0 ± 2.3 min and diving depth was 17.2 ± 22.5 m (maximum 18.7 min and 288 m,respectively). Haulout periods occurred 3 ± 2 times per day (duration = 44.0 ± 98.1 min). The overall distance swumper day was 48.1 ± 23.2 km. Three dive types were differentiated using a combination of hierarchical and k-meansclustering, one V-shaped grouping and two U-shaped groupings. The most common dive type was U1; these dives werethe deepest and longest type (depth = 28 ± 32 m, duration = 185 ± 146 s), and bottom time occupied a significantfraction of the total dive time (120 ± 120 s). These dives are likely foraging dives. Lactation is energetically demandingfor bearded seals, and females do forage while they have dependent pups.