Deep divers in shallow seas: Southern elephant seals on the Patagonian shelf

Elephant seals are wide-ranging, pelagic, deep-diving (average of 400-600 m) predators that typically travel to open waters and continental shelf edges thousands of kilometers from their land breeding colonies. We report a less common pattern of foraging in the shallow waters of a continental shelf....

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Autores principales: Campagna, C., Piola, A.R., Marin, M.R., Lewis, M., Zajaczkovski, U., Fernández, T.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09670637_v54_n10_p1792_Campagna
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spelling todo:paper_09670637_v54_n10_p1792_Campagna2023-10-03T15:55:01Z Deep divers in shallow seas: Southern elephant seals on the Patagonian shelf Campagna, C. Piola, A.R. Marin, M.R. Lewis, M. Zajaczkovski, U. Fernández, T. Continental shelf Elephant seals Patagonia Bathymetry Ecosystems Phytoplankton Seawater Elephant seals Patagonia Phytoplankton concentrations Marine biology chlorophyll a diel migration diving foraging behavior habitat selection phytoplankton pinniped predator shallow water shelf break Argentina Argentine Basin Atlantic Ocean Chubut Patagonian Shelf South America Valdes Peninsula Mirounga Mirounga leonina Elephant seals are wide-ranging, pelagic, deep-diving (average of 400-600 m) predators that typically travel to open waters and continental shelf edges thousands of kilometers from their land breeding colonies. We report a less common pattern of foraging in the shallow waters of a continental shelf. Southern elephant seals, Mirounga leonina, that breed at Península Valdés (Argentina), face an extended (∼1,000,000 km2; 400-700 km-wide, depending on track), shallow (<150 m) and seasonally productive plateau, the Patagonian shelf. Adults of both sexes usually cross it in rapid transit to other potential foraging grounds on the shelf edge or in the Argentine Basin, but 2-4 year-old juveniles spread over the plateau and spent months in shallow waters. This behavior was recorded for 9 seals (5 males and 4 females) of 23 satellite-tracked juveniles (springs of 2004 and 2005) and for 2 subadult males studied in previous seasons. Trips included travel trajectories and time spent in areas where swim speed decreased, suggesting foraging. Preferred locations of juvenile females were in the proximity of the shelf break, where stratified waters had relatively high phytoplankton concentrations, but young and subadult males used the relatively cold (7-8 °C), low-salinity (∼33.3) mid-shelf waters, with depths of 105-120 m and a poorly stratified water column. Three of the latter seals, instrumented with time-depth recorders, showed dives compatible with benthic feeding and no diel pattern of depths distribution. Regions of the mid-shelf were used in different seasons and were associated with low chlorophyll-a concentration at the time of the visit, suggesting that surface productivity does not overlap with putative quality habitat for benthic foragers. Benthic diving on the shallow mid-shelf would be a resource partitioning strategy advantageous for young males prior to greater energetic demands of a high growth rate and a large body size. Later in life, the more predictable, bathymetry-forced, shelf-break front may offer the food resources that explain the uninterrupted increase of this population over several decades. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09670637_v54_n10_p1792_Campagna
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Continental shelf
Elephant seals
Patagonia
Bathymetry
Ecosystems
Phytoplankton
Seawater
Elephant seals
Patagonia
Phytoplankton concentrations
Marine biology
chlorophyll a
diel migration
diving
foraging behavior
habitat selection
phytoplankton
pinniped
predator
shallow water
shelf break
Argentina
Argentine Basin
Atlantic Ocean
Chubut
Patagonian Shelf
South America
Valdes Peninsula
Mirounga
Mirounga leonina
spellingShingle Continental shelf
Elephant seals
Patagonia
Bathymetry
Ecosystems
Phytoplankton
Seawater
Elephant seals
Patagonia
Phytoplankton concentrations
Marine biology
chlorophyll a
diel migration
diving
foraging behavior
habitat selection
phytoplankton
pinniped
predator
shallow water
shelf break
Argentina
Argentine Basin
Atlantic Ocean
Chubut
Patagonian Shelf
South America
Valdes Peninsula
Mirounga
Mirounga leonina
Campagna, C.
Piola, A.R.
Marin, M.R.
Lewis, M.
Zajaczkovski, U.
Fernández, T.
Deep divers in shallow seas: Southern elephant seals on the Patagonian shelf
topic_facet Continental shelf
Elephant seals
Patagonia
Bathymetry
Ecosystems
Phytoplankton
Seawater
Elephant seals
Patagonia
Phytoplankton concentrations
Marine biology
chlorophyll a
diel migration
diving
foraging behavior
habitat selection
phytoplankton
pinniped
predator
shallow water
shelf break
Argentina
Argentine Basin
Atlantic Ocean
Chubut
Patagonian Shelf
South America
Valdes Peninsula
Mirounga
Mirounga leonina
description Elephant seals are wide-ranging, pelagic, deep-diving (average of 400-600 m) predators that typically travel to open waters and continental shelf edges thousands of kilometers from their land breeding colonies. We report a less common pattern of foraging in the shallow waters of a continental shelf. Southern elephant seals, Mirounga leonina, that breed at Península Valdés (Argentina), face an extended (∼1,000,000 km2; 400-700 km-wide, depending on track), shallow (<150 m) and seasonally productive plateau, the Patagonian shelf. Adults of both sexes usually cross it in rapid transit to other potential foraging grounds on the shelf edge or in the Argentine Basin, but 2-4 year-old juveniles spread over the plateau and spent months in shallow waters. This behavior was recorded for 9 seals (5 males and 4 females) of 23 satellite-tracked juveniles (springs of 2004 and 2005) and for 2 subadult males studied in previous seasons. Trips included travel trajectories and time spent in areas where swim speed decreased, suggesting foraging. Preferred locations of juvenile females were in the proximity of the shelf break, where stratified waters had relatively high phytoplankton concentrations, but young and subadult males used the relatively cold (7-8 °C), low-salinity (∼33.3) mid-shelf waters, with depths of 105-120 m and a poorly stratified water column. Three of the latter seals, instrumented with time-depth recorders, showed dives compatible with benthic feeding and no diel pattern of depths distribution. Regions of the mid-shelf were used in different seasons and were associated with low chlorophyll-a concentration at the time of the visit, suggesting that surface productivity does not overlap with putative quality habitat for benthic foragers. Benthic diving on the shallow mid-shelf would be a resource partitioning strategy advantageous for young males prior to greater energetic demands of a high growth rate and a large body size. Later in life, the more predictable, bathymetry-forced, shelf-break front may offer the food resources that explain the uninterrupted increase of this population over several decades. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
format JOUR
author Campagna, C.
Piola, A.R.
Marin, M.R.
Lewis, M.
Zajaczkovski, U.
Fernández, T.
author_facet Campagna, C.
Piola, A.R.
Marin, M.R.
Lewis, M.
Zajaczkovski, U.
Fernández, T.
author_sort Campagna, C.
title Deep divers in shallow seas: Southern elephant seals on the Patagonian shelf
title_short Deep divers in shallow seas: Southern elephant seals on the Patagonian shelf
title_full Deep divers in shallow seas: Southern elephant seals on the Patagonian shelf
title_fullStr Deep divers in shallow seas: Southern elephant seals on the Patagonian shelf
title_full_unstemmed Deep divers in shallow seas: Southern elephant seals on the Patagonian shelf
title_sort deep divers in shallow seas: southern elephant seals on the patagonian shelf
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09670637_v54_n10_p1792_Campagna
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