On behalf of my co-authors, I would like to share a new open access publication 
entitled: Environmental heterogeneity plays a bigger role than diet quality in 
driving divergent California sea lion population trends.

Abstract:
While the global population of California sea lions (Zalophus californianus) is 
increasing, regional trends show a decline in the Gulf of California (GoC, 
Mexico) and an increase in the Channel Islands (CI, U.S.) over the last 40 
years. The drivers of these divergent trends remain unclear, but previous 
pinniped studies suggest that differences in diet quality—rather than prey 
abundance—may play a role. We therefore examined how California sea lion 
population trajectories relate to diet quality, specifically looking at diet 
energy density and diet diversity. Using population and diet data from 1980 to 
2020 for sea lions in the GoC and CI, we found no simple relationships between 
population trajectories and diet quality over time at either the local or 
regional level. Energy densities of sea lion diets were similar between the two 
regions, but GoC sea lions consumed a more diverse range of prey (n = 88 vs. 23 
main prey taxa) dominated by benthic species and schooling fishes, while CI 
diets consisted mainly of schooling fishes and squid. We also found that GoC 
sea lions ate more benthic prey and less schooling fish during the 2014–2016 
heatwave—decreasing their overall diet energy density. This shift coincided 
with a temporary population decline in the CI but had variable effects on GoC 
populations. Overall, our findings suggest that regional population trends are 
influenced by complex ecological factors beyond diet quality alone, 
highlighting the need to consider environmental variability and prey 
composition when assessing the resilience of sea lion populations to 
climate-driven changes.

The paper is freely available as:
Pozas-Franco AL, Rosen DAS, Trites AW, García-Rodríguez FJ, 
Hernández-Camacho CJ (2025)
Environmental heterogeneity plays a bigger role than diet quality in driving 
divergent California sea lion population trends.
PLoS One 20(11): e0324108. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal. pone.0324108
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