Monday, October 27, 2014

Undergraduates collect elephant seal data

The 40+ year elephant seal demography study at Ano Nuevo
relies upon researchers, graduate students, and volunteers to
collect flipper-tag resight data.  We are currently training a
new group of undergraduate volunteers who will gain valuable
hands-on marine mammal experience.

Undergraduate volunteers Adam Taylor, Samantha Spurlin,
Shannon Miner, and Victoria Wade observe a group of
elephant seals a few meters away.







Sunday, October 26, 2014

Mercury accumulation in elephant seals

Graduate student Sarah Peterson is studying contaminants in
elephant seals.  She collected samples from 75 seals that foraged
all over the north Pacific and discovered surprisingly high levels of
Mercury (many times higher than bluefin tuna!).  This is likely due
to mercury accumulation at mesopelagic depths (200 - 1000m) and
has implications for many other species that forage in this zone.

Click here for the full story!

NL27-Peterson-Fig1
Tracking data from the seals Sarah sampled


Thursday, October 23, 2014

Video tour of Ano Nuevo Island

Accessing many parts of Ano Nuevo Island often requires crawling
on hands and knees to avoid disturbing the abundant sea lion and
bird populations.  However, there are some periods when researchers
can walk freely and I took this opportunity to take a video.  This
walk-though shows the inside of several building and several research
groups packing up to head back to the mainland after a successful day.

The UC Natural Reserve System and UC Santa Cruz maintain the
old foghorn building that is now used by researchers as a work/sleep
area.  The old lighthouse keeper's house was abandoned long ago
and is beyond easy repair.

Ano Nuevo Island is full of life and provides incredible study
opportunities to a diverse group of researchers.


Monday, October 6, 2014

Shark attacks on elephant seals

Over the past few weeks, we have seen several elephant seals with either severe or fatal shark bite wounds.


Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Online predator track analysis

The elephant seal tracking data collected by researchers at Ano Nuevo is used for a variety of teaching applications.  The most recent is a website that combines data from several top predators in the north Pacific and allows the user to do some basic analysis such as kernel density or associations with primary productivity.  It is a very slick web-based interface and includes detailed teacher instructions for several modules.

Check it out by following this link:
http://oceantracks.org/



OT Map multi

Ano Nuevo researchers win awards at international conference!

Two researchers studying elephant seals at Ano Nuevo won awards at the International Biologging Science meeting Last week.  Congratulations to Taiki Adachi for winning best talk and Sarah Peterson for winning best poster!

Read the conference abstracts below to learn about their work:

Searching prey in 3D environment: hierarchical foraging behaviour of northern
elephant seals
Adachi Taiki 1, Costa Daniel 2, Robinson Patrick 2, Yamamichi Masato 3, Naito Yasuhiko 4,
Takahashi Akinori 1,4
1: Department of Polar Science, the Graduate University for Advanced Studies, Japan (im.taiky@gmail.com)
2: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Santa Cruz, USA
3: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, USA
4: National Institute of Polar Research, Japan
Predators are expected to adjust their movement path according to the spatial distribution pattern of
prey. In the marine environment, diving predators exploit three-dimensional (3D) environment where
small-scale prey patches are often nested within large-scale patches (hierarchical distribution). However, few studies examined the fine-scale foraging behaviour of deep divers in three dimensions. Here we applied spherical first-passage time (SFPT) analysis on 3D diving path of four female northern elephant seals during their foraging migrations. We also examined prey encounter events along the 3D diving path using mandible accelerometers. SFPT analysis showed that area-restricted search (ARS) behaviour occurred at the small spatial scale of 8-10 m (i.e. radius of sphere), which was nested within the larger ARS scale of 17-19 m. Small- and large-scale ARS behaviour occurred 4.7 and 5.9 times in a single dive on average, respectively, and covered only the small proportion (9 and 22%, respectively) of the total distance traveled during the bottom phase of dives. However, a large proportion of prey encounter events (71 and 84%) occurred during the small- and large-scale ARS behaviour, respectively. These results suggest that elephant seals effectively use nested ARS  behaviour to enhance foraging success in the hierarchically structured 3D marine environment.


Elephant seals: biologgers of contaminants in the mesopelagic North Pacific
Peterson Sarah 1, Ackerman Josh 2, Covaci Adrian 3, Debier Cathy 4, Costa Daniel 1
1: University of California Santa Cruz, USA (saepeter@ucsc.edu)
2: United States Geological Survey, USA
3: University of Antwerp, Belgium
4: Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium
Northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris), mesopelagic (200-1000 m) marine predators that
forage in the coastal and open-ocean North Pacific, integrate contaminants into their tissues while
foraging. We used satellite-tracked adult females (with time-depth recorders) as biologgers of mercury and persistent organic pollutants (POPs) to examine links between foraging ecology and contaminant accumulation, as well as to determine how contaminant distribution may vary geographically. At the end of a foraging trip, we sampled 78 seals for total mercury (blood and muscle) and a subset of these (N=23) for POPs (blood and blubber). Total mercury in blood and muscle fell among the highest concentrations reported for marine predators. Moreover, foraging ecology influenced mercury exposure, with the highest concentrations observed in offshore, deep-diving females. We observed differences in mercury and POP concentrations across the foraging range of elephant seals, suggesting varying geographic distributions and bioaccumulation of specific compounds. Our results indicate that mesopelagic predators may be at greater risk for contaminant accumulation than previously assumed and provide insight into the potential for contaminants in elusive and vulnerable mesopelagic species. We also demonstrate how quantifying animal behavior using biologging technology can be used in conjunction with animals as biological integrators of their environment.