Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T02:16:01.775Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Oceanographic factors influencing the distribution of South American fur seal, Arctocephalus australis around the Falkland Islands before the breeding season

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 June 2009

Vladimir Laptikhovsky*
Affiliation:
Falkland Islands Fisheries Department, FIPASS, PO Box 598, Stanley, Falkland Islands, FIQQ 1ZZ
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: V. Laptikhovsky, Falkland Islands Fisheries Department, FIPASS, PO Box 598, Stanley, Falkland Islands, FIQQ 1ZZ email: [email protected]

Abstract

Distribution of fur seals Arctocephalus australis has been studied in October 2007 on the western, southern and eastern Falkland shelves during the survey of spawning grounds of the red cod, Salilota australis. Fur seals presence/absence, numbers and sex were recorded at every oceanographic station. Animals were found foraging on the shelf edge south-west of the islands, in a productive zone with quasi-stationary eddies at a periphery of upwelling. It was also the zone of maximum abundance of lobster-krill, Munida spp.—an important food source of fur seals and aggregations of both red cod and blue whiting, Micromesistius australis. No fur seals were found in waters of the relative cold and saline Falkland Current as well as in the relatively warm, fresh and oxygen-rich waters of Argentine Drift. It allows supposing that position and extension of the foraging grounds are caused by oceanographic features determining distribution of prey species.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Baylis, A.M.M., Page, B. and Goldsworthy, S.D. (2008a) Colony-specific foraging areas of lactating New Zealand fur seals. Marine Ecology Progress Series 361, 279290.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baylis, A.M.M., Page, B. and Goldsworthy, S.D. (2008b) Effect of seasonal changes in upwelling activity on the foraging locations of a wide-ranging central-place forager, the New Zealand fur seal. Canadian Journal of Zoology 86, 774789.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boyd, I.L., Staniland, I.J. and Martin, A.R. (2002) Distribution of foraging by female Antarctic fur seals. Marine Ecology Progress Series 242, 285294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clausen, A.P., Arkhipkin, A.I., Laptikhovsky, V.V. and Huin, N. (2005) What is out there: diversity in feeding of gentoo penguins (Pygoscelis papua) around the Falkland Islands (Southwest Atlantic). Polar Biology 28, 653662.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klages, N.T.W. (1996) Cephalopods as a prey: seals. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, London. Biological Sciences 351, 10451052.Google Scholar
Lea, M.A., Guinet, C., Cherel, Y., Duhamel, G., Dubroca, L., Pruvost, P. and Hindell, M. (2006) Impacts of climatic anomalies on provisioning strategies of a Southern Ocean predator. Marine Ecology Progress Series 310, 7794.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, R.A. (2004) Natural mortality of puffadder shysharks due to Cape fur seals and black-backed kelp gulls at Seal Island, South Africa. Journal of Fish Biology 64, 711716.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pajaro, M. and Macchi, G.J. (2001) Spawning pattern, length at maturity, and fecundity of the southern blue whiting (Micromesistius australis) in the south-west Atlantic Ocean. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research 35, 375385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schlitzer, R. (2006) Ocean data view. http://odv.awi.deGoogle Scholar
Strange, I.J. (1992) A field guide to the wildlife of the Falkland Islands and South Georgia. London: Harper Collins.Google Scholar
Thompson, D. and Moss, S. (2001) Foraging behaviour of South American fur seals (Arctocephalus australis) in the Falkland Islands. NERC Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of St Andrews.Google Scholar
Thompson, D., Moss, S.E.W. and Lovell, P. (2003) Foraging behaviour of South American fur seals Arctocephalus australis: extracting fine scale foraging behaviour from satellite tracks. Marine Ecology Progress Series 260, 285296.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, R.W., Gillon, K.W., Black, A.D. and Reid, J.B. (2002) The distribution of seabirds and marine mammals in Falkland Islands waters. Peterborough: Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 107 pp.Google Scholar