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Geographical, temporal, and individual‐based differences in the trophic ecology of female Cape fur seals

Geographical, temporal, and individual‐based differences in the trophic ecology of female Cape fur seals
Geographical, temporal, and individual‐based differences in the trophic ecology of female Cape fur seals
Information on resource use and trophic dynamics of marine predators is important for understanding their role in ecosystem functioning and predicting population-level responses to environmental change. Where separate populations experience different local environmental conditions, geographic variability in their foraging ecology is often expected. Within populations, individuals also vary in morphology, physiology, and experience, resulting in specialization in resource use. In this context, isotopic compositions of incrementally grown tissues such as keratinous hairs offer a valuable opportunity to study long-term variation in resource and habitat use. We investigated the trophic ecology of female Cape fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus) using carbon and nitrogen isotopic compositions of serially sampled whiskers collected at four breeding sites along the coast of South Africa. Drawing on over 900 isotopic measurements, we assessed geographic variability in isotopic niche width between colonies and the degree of individual specialization. We found slight, but clear geographic differences in isotopic ratios and isotopic niche widths, seemingly related to ecological setting, with niche widths being proportional to the area of available shelf and shelf-slope habitat surrounding the colony. We further identified periodic oscillations in isotopic ratios, which likely reflect temporal patterns in foraging distribution and prey type, linked to shifts in the availability of prey resources and their interaction with constraints on individual females throughout their breeding cycle. Finally, individual specialization indices revealed that each of the study populations contain specialist individuals that utilize only a small subset of the total population niche width. The degree of individual specialization was, however, not consistent across colonies and may reflect an interactive influence between density-dependent effects and habitat heterogeneity. Overall, this study provides important information on the trophic ecology of Cape fur seals breeding in South Africa and highlights the need to consider geographic and individual variability when assessing the foraging ecology of marine predators.
2045-7758
Botha, Jonathan A.
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Trueman, Clive N.
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Kirkman, Stephen P.
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Arnould, John P.Y.
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Lombard, Amanda T.
63ad3df8-1031-4cd2-94b9-81d5d0976dbc
Connan, Maëlle
96e55fc2-588e-47ef-87d2-ae8c9a09e529
Hofmeyr, G.J. Greg
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Seakamela, S. Mduduzi
dc8218fb-bed5-4a27-b8c1-e094c55e16e5
Pistorius, Pierre A.
a288f7c6-fa98-4314-9f85-53790fa2b905
Botha, Jonathan A.
1024022f-2fb4-4c2e-a704-d36348d33629
Trueman, Clive N.
d00d3bd6-a47b-4d47-89ae-841c3d506205
Kirkman, Stephen P.
73111260-8696-4709-ab2f-f3138e01cb57
Arnould, John P.Y.
35535022-8541-4dd4-af92-0ddd565e00c2
Lombard, Amanda T.
63ad3df8-1031-4cd2-94b9-81d5d0976dbc
Connan, Maëlle
96e55fc2-588e-47ef-87d2-ae8c9a09e529
Hofmeyr, G.J. Greg
8b123f29-f97a-4b48-8852-99544b19c02d
Seakamela, S. Mduduzi
dc8218fb-bed5-4a27-b8c1-e094c55e16e5
Pistorius, Pierre A.
a288f7c6-fa98-4314-9f85-53790fa2b905

Botha, Jonathan A., Trueman, Clive N., Kirkman, Stephen P., Arnould, John P.Y., Lombard, Amanda T., Connan, Maëlle, Hofmeyr, G.J. Greg, Seakamela, S. Mduduzi and Pistorius, Pierre A. (2023) Geographical, temporal, and individual‐based differences in the trophic ecology of female Cape fur seals. Ecology and Evolution, 13 (2), [e9790]. (doi:10.1002/ece3.9790).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Information on resource use and trophic dynamics of marine predators is important for understanding their role in ecosystem functioning and predicting population-level responses to environmental change. Where separate populations experience different local environmental conditions, geographic variability in their foraging ecology is often expected. Within populations, individuals also vary in morphology, physiology, and experience, resulting in specialization in resource use. In this context, isotopic compositions of incrementally grown tissues such as keratinous hairs offer a valuable opportunity to study long-term variation in resource and habitat use. We investigated the trophic ecology of female Cape fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus) using carbon and nitrogen isotopic compositions of serially sampled whiskers collected at four breeding sites along the coast of South Africa. Drawing on over 900 isotopic measurements, we assessed geographic variability in isotopic niche width between colonies and the degree of individual specialization. We found slight, but clear geographic differences in isotopic ratios and isotopic niche widths, seemingly related to ecological setting, with niche widths being proportional to the area of available shelf and shelf-slope habitat surrounding the colony. We further identified periodic oscillations in isotopic ratios, which likely reflect temporal patterns in foraging distribution and prey type, linked to shifts in the availability of prey resources and their interaction with constraints on individual females throughout their breeding cycle. Finally, individual specialization indices revealed that each of the study populations contain specialist individuals that utilize only a small subset of the total population niche width. The degree of individual specialization was, however, not consistent across colonies and may reflect an interactive influence between density-dependent effects and habitat heterogeneity. Overall, this study provides important information on the trophic ecology of Cape fur seals breeding in South Africa and highlights the need to consider geographic and individual variability when assessing the foraging ecology of marine predators.

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Accepted/In Press date: 10 January 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 February 2023
Published date: February 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491043
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491043
ISSN: 2045-7758
PURE UUID: 0db0f383-cf55-4bc2-87f7-3c6c0eed0ee4
ORCID for Clive N. Trueman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4995-736X

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Date deposited: 11 Jun 2024 16:43
Last modified: 15 Jun 2024 01:39

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Contributors

Author: Jonathan A. Botha
Author: Stephen P. Kirkman
Author: John P.Y. Arnould
Author: Amanda T. Lombard
Author: Maëlle Connan
Author: G.J. Greg Hofmeyr
Author: S. Mduduzi Seakamela
Author: Pierre A. Pistorius

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