Hi MARMAM’ers!


My co-authors and I are excited to share our recently published open-access
paper on leopard seal sexual behavior:



Kienle, S. S., Bonin, C. A., Gómez, G., Goebel, M. E., Donke, M., Sperou,
E. S., Guerrero, A. I. & Borras-Chavez, R. (2024). First paired
observations of sexual behavior and calls in wild leopard seals. *Polar
Biology*, 1-13.



The paper is available at:
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00300-024-03275-4



Abstract: Little is known about the reproductive biology of the leopard
seal (*Hydrurga leptonyx*), a Southern Ocean predator. Here we observed
sexual behavior in wild leopard seals in Laguna San Rafael, Chile during a
2 h courtship interaction between a female and male. The female was hauled
out on ice, mostly lying still (69% of the time) or moving (19%). The male
was mostly under water (87%) or at the water’s surface (11%). The female
made seven in-air calls (i.e., thump pulse, noseblast, blast, growl). The
male produced 65 underwater calls (i.e., low- and high-double trills,
unidentified trills). The underwater calls appeared to be directed toward
the female. After the primary male vocalized for an hour, one or two
unidentified leopard seals briefly swam near the female. After leaving the
area, we heard underwater calls for another 8 h. The next day, the primary
male was hauled out on ice with a swollen genital opening. The male was
bleeding from a laceration caudal to the preputial opening, suggesting the
male attempted to mate and that the female, or another seal, was
responsible for the injury. Together, we find that leopard seal courtship
involves a suite of behavioral and acoustic behaviors by both sexes, both
in air and under water. This is the first description of leopard seal
sexual behavior in the wild. Our study also provides the first evidence
that leopard seals mate in South America.



Feel free to email me at sarah_kie...@baylor.edu for a pdf copy or for
further discussion.



Wishing everyone a lovely week,

Sarah

-- 
*Sarah S. Kienle, PhD* | she/her/hers
Assistant Professor
Department of Biology
Baylor University
Kienle Lab <https://www.sarahskienle.com/>
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
MARMAM@lists.uvic.ca
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to