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Seasonal occurrence and condition of leopard seals at an extralimital Sub-Antarctic Island

Seasonal occurrence and condition of leopard seals at an extralimital Sub-Antarctic Island
Seasonal occurrence and condition of leopard seals at an extralimital Sub-Antarctic Island

Leopard seals (Hydrurga leptonyx) occur mainly south of the Antarctic Polar Front, but immatures, in particular, seasonally move beyond this range during the austral winter and spring, typically under increased sea ice conditions. Extralimital occurrences of leopard seals can be observed at several sub-Antarctic islands where they haul out to rest. We present new records of leopard seal sightings at Marion Island, southern Indian Ocean, from 2006 to 2024 and discuss fluctuations in their seasonal and annual abundance (drawing on data collected since 1980) and body condition based on regular surveys. The eastern beaches at Marion Island were surveyed every 7–10 days while the western beaches were visited monthly. Observed leopard seals were photographed and given a body condition score based on the visibility of bony protrusions. From 2006 to 2024, we identified 35 presumed unique immature leopard seals between July and November, with a peak in September, all being immatures. Individuals to which we could assign body condition scores were either in good or excellent condition. This contrasted with the prevailing hypothesis that leopard seal body condition deteriorates with decreasing latitude. However, we could not determine whether this was because of an actual shift in body condition or because we used a different scoring system from other studies. We recommend adopting a standardised scoring system for visually estimating pinniped body condition and a global repository to monitor leopard seal haul-outs. As an apex predator, leopard seals may be important indicators in Antarctic and sub-Antarctic ecosystems, and monitoring changes in their distribution and body condition may indicate environmental and biological changes in these remote regions.

Body condition, Immature, Marion Island, Pinniped, Seasonal transient, Southern Ocean
0722-4060
Ross, Michael D.
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Leitner, Monica
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Oosthuizen, W. Chris
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Bester, Marthán N.
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Jordaan, Rowan K.
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Voysey, Michael D.
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Conradie, Everhard C.
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Dosi, Banele
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Evans, Sean
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Lloyd, Kyle J.
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Monier, Zafar
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Purdon, Jean
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Reisinger, Ryan R.
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Shihlomule, Yinhla D.
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van der Vyver, J.S.Frederik
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de Bruyn, P.J.Nico
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Ross, Michael D.
94ed663c-a7fc-4d4c-abea-03b93a3bb016
Leitner, Monica
9555f14a-62fc-408d-b841-101edeb4c5ec
Oosthuizen, W. Chris
1b94648f-2c36-4d46-bc75-ca5b394a3f98
Bester, Marthán N.
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Jordaan, Rowan K.
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Voysey, Michael D.
a7bd0102-59ed-4993-af8a-a52da8791d33
Conradie, Everhard C.
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Dosi, Banele
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Evans, Sean
21b7423b-b0ca-4a9c-bd31-48de0c24c222
Lloyd, Kyle J.
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Monier, Zafar
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Purdon, Jean
411df337-2509-446f-8fa0-169965420fb0
Reisinger, Ryan R.
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Shihlomule, Yinhla D.
5dd88ccd-e6a7-4b20-9fd9-77e654eb51bd
van der Vyver, J.S.Frederik
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de Bruyn, P.J.Nico
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Ross, Michael D., Leitner, Monica, Oosthuizen, W. Chris, Bester, Marthán N., Jordaan, Rowan K., Voysey, Michael D., Conradie, Everhard C., Dosi, Banele, Evans, Sean, Lloyd, Kyle J., Monier, Zafar, Purdon, Jean, Reisinger, Ryan R., Shihlomule, Yinhla D., van der Vyver, J.S.Frederik and de Bruyn, P.J.Nico (2025) Seasonal occurrence and condition of leopard seals at an extralimital Sub-Antarctic Island. Polar Biology, 48 (2), [59]. (doi:10.1007/s00300-025-03378-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Leopard seals (Hydrurga leptonyx) occur mainly south of the Antarctic Polar Front, but immatures, in particular, seasonally move beyond this range during the austral winter and spring, typically under increased sea ice conditions. Extralimital occurrences of leopard seals can be observed at several sub-Antarctic islands where they haul out to rest. We present new records of leopard seal sightings at Marion Island, southern Indian Ocean, from 2006 to 2024 and discuss fluctuations in their seasonal and annual abundance (drawing on data collected since 1980) and body condition based on regular surveys. The eastern beaches at Marion Island were surveyed every 7–10 days while the western beaches were visited monthly. Observed leopard seals were photographed and given a body condition score based on the visibility of bony protrusions. From 2006 to 2024, we identified 35 presumed unique immature leopard seals between July and November, with a peak in September, all being immatures. Individuals to which we could assign body condition scores were either in good or excellent condition. This contrasted with the prevailing hypothesis that leopard seal body condition deteriorates with decreasing latitude. However, we could not determine whether this was because of an actual shift in body condition or because we used a different scoring system from other studies. We recommend adopting a standardised scoring system for visually estimating pinniped body condition and a global repository to monitor leopard seal haul-outs. As an apex predator, leopard seals may be important indicators in Antarctic and sub-Antarctic ecosystems, and monitoring changes in their distribution and body condition may indicate environmental and biological changes in these remote regions.

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s00300-025-03378-6 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 March 2025
Published date: 28 March 2025
Keywords: Body condition, Immature, Marion Island, Pinniped, Seasonal transient, Southern Ocean

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501257
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501257
ISSN: 0722-4060
PURE UUID: 732a695b-03d4-4077-ad62-4d62bd2a69ba
ORCID for Ryan R. Reisinger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8933-6875

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Date deposited: 28 May 2025 16:31
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:33

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Contributors

Author: Michael D. Ross
Author: Monica Leitner
Author: W. Chris Oosthuizen
Author: Marthán N. Bester
Author: Rowan K. Jordaan
Author: Michael D. Voysey
Author: Everhard C. Conradie
Author: Banele Dosi
Author: Sean Evans
Author: Kyle J. Lloyd
Author: Zafar Monier
Author: Jean Purdon
Author: Yinhla D. Shihlomule
Author: J.S.Frederik van der Vyver
Author: P.J.Nico de Bruyn

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