scholarly journals Comparing temporal patterns in body condition of ringed seals living within their core geographic range with those living at the edge

Ecography ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 43 (10) ◽  
pp. 1521-1535
Author(s):  
Steven H. Ferguson ◽  
David J. Yurkowski ◽  
Brent G. Young ◽  
Aaron T. Fisk ◽  
Derek C. G. Muir ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (5) ◽  
pp. 2780-2789 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Yurkowski ◽  
Evan S. Richardson ◽  
Nicholas J. Lunn ◽  
Derek C.G. Muir ◽  
Amy C. Johnson ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 58 (5) ◽  
pp. 273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine A. Schlesinger ◽  
Keith A. Christian ◽  
Craig D. James ◽  
Stephen R. Morton

In the Australian arid zone, primary productivity is highly variable in response to irregular and unpredictable rainfall and this has major flow-on effects for desert fauna. We measured temporal patterns of activity and body condition of eight reptile species, and growth for the three most abundant species, in a dry and a wet year. Activity and body condition of the diurnal lizards Ctenophorus nuchalis and Amphibolurus gilberti (Agamidae) and Ctenotus leonhardii and Ctenotus schomburgkii (Scincidae) varied predictably. In the dry year the onset of warm-season activity was delayed and body condition was low, whereas high levels of activity and body condition were observed in the wet year. Growth rates of C. schomburgkii, C. leonhardii, and C. nuchalis did not differ between the two years. Body condition of the nocturnal lizards Diplodactylus conspicillatus and Rhynchoedura ornata (Gekkonidae) and Lerista labialis (Scincidae) did not differ between years but the nocturnal blind snake Ramphotyphlops centralis (Typhlopidae) had higher condition in the wet year. Nocturnal species were active only in warmer months and this apparently limited their ability to respond to favourable conditions in the wet year. Temporal patterns of activity may be important determinants of how effectively lizards can make use of available resources after rain.


ARCTIC ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-138
Author(s):  
Stephen J. Insley ◽  
Lila M. Tauzer ◽  
William D. Halliday ◽  
Joe Illasiak ◽  
Ryan Green ◽  
...  

Diet from stomach contents and body condition from morphometric measurements were obtained for 169 (108 stomachs analysed) ringed seals (Pusa hispida) for the Amundsen Gulf region in the western Canadian Arctic from 2015 to 2018. Sampling was from subsistence-harvested seals from the three communities of Paulatuk (spring, summer, and autumn), Sachs Harbour (summer), and Ulukhaktok (winter), Northwest Territories. Stomach contents were separated through sieves and by hand, and taxa identified to the lowest taxonomic level possible and weighed. Stomachs were fullest (by weight and prey count) in the autumn, which suggests that foraging was most intense and successful at that time. A total of 93 prey taxa, including 17 fish and 76 invertebrate species were identified. Several fish and invertebrate species were regularly found together, the most common being Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida), sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus), capelin (Mallotus villosus), and hyperiid amphipods (Themisto spp.). Condition measurements inferred from blubber thickness, although showing considerable variation among sites and years, had a seasonal relationship with maximal depth during the autumn and winter. Overall, the diet of ringed seals in Amundsen Gulf was broadly similar to those reported from other areas while also indicating some degree of regional specificity. When compared to the diet of ringed seals in the same area in the 1980s, the results presented here were more diverse, with new or increased numbers of subarctic species (e.g., saffron cod, Eleginus gracilis) found in the samples. This finding is a likely consequence of climate warming, as increasing numbers of subarctic species move north with warming ocean temperatures in the Arctic. 


2017 ◽  
Vol 151 ◽  
pp. 149-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Brosset ◽  
Jean-Marc Fromentin ◽  
Elisabeth Van Beveren ◽  
Josep Lloret ◽  
Virginie Marques ◽  
...  

ARCTIC ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 206-220
Author(s):  
Lois A. Harwood ◽  
Thomas G. Smith ◽  
John Alikamik ◽  
Emma Alikamik ◽  
Ellen V. Lea ◽  
...  

The circumpolar Arctic ringed seal (Pusa hispida) occupies its fast-ice breeding habitat for four to five months during winter and the pack ice or open water of adjacent areas for the rest of the year. From 1971 – 78 and 1992 – 2019, we sampled approximately 100 ringed seals annually from western Prince Albert Sound (WPAS), the prime ringed seal fast-ice breeding habitat in Canada’s Western Arctic, adjacent to primary overwinter foraging habitat in eastern Amundsen Gulf (EAG). As our metric of body condition, we measured ventral blubber depth corrected for body size. As our metrics of reproduction, we measured the annual ovulation rate of multiparous females and percent pups in the open-water harvest. We examined these biological parameters in relation to the winter Arctic Oscillation Index (winAOI) and the timing of sea ice clearance in EAG in spring. There were no significant effects of age or sample month (June or July) on adult blubber depth, but significant sex and year effects and, in females, ovulation status effects. Across the series, as we have observed previously through 2011, there was a sustained temporal declining trend in blubber depth in adults of both sexes. There was no temporal trend in residual blubber depth, no correlation between blubber depth and sea ice clearance date in EAG, and a quasi-cyclic pattern in blubber depth that tracked some of the phases of the winAOI. Annual ovulation rates were mainly in the 80% – 100% range and correlated with percent pups in the open harvest in the same year. Three (1974, 2005, 2012) of the 36 y experienced reproductive failures, when over 50% of the multiparous females failed to ovulate. In each case, ovulation rates returned to normal within 1 – 3 y. Low annual ovulation rates were correlated with late sea ice clearance in EAG in spring, with two widespread ovulation failure events taking place in years when spring sea ice clearance was delayed by five to six weeks. The most recent ovulation failure (2012) differed in that it came in an average ice year but at the end of a six-year sequence of negative residual mean blubber depths. Earlier spring sea ice clearance in WPAS, based on the observed rate of 3.8 d per decade, would on average not result in the physical loss of sea ice for pupping in this core habitat before 2140. The mechanisms involved in the sustained declining temporal trend in body condition, linkage with some phases of the winAOI, and the temporary but episodic failures of ovulation are complex and not fully explained by either the timing of sea ice clearance or the winAOI. Until the complex mix of factors, pressures and responses are understood, our ability to predict the impacts of a changing climate on ringed seals will remain limited.


1978 ◽  
Vol 23 (11) ◽  
pp. 856-857
Author(s):  
W. LAWRENCE GULICK
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Navarro ◽  
L. Ceja ◽  
J. Poppelbaum ◽  
D. Gomes
Keyword(s):  

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