Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are please to announce the publication of the article ' 
Trade-offs between foraging efficiency and pup feeding rate of lactating 
northern fur seals in a declining population’ in Marine Ecology Progress Series 
and freely available online (open access) at
https://www.int-res.com/abstracts/meps/v600/p207-222/

Citation:
Jeanniard du Dot T, Trites AW, Arnould JPY, Speakman JR, Guinet C (2018) 
Trade-offs between foraging efficiency and pup feeding rate of lactating 
northern fur seals in a declining population. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 600:207-222. 
https://doi.org/10.3354/meps12638

Abstract:
Foraging strategies and their resulting efficiency (energy gain to cost ratio) 
affect animals’ survival and reproductive success and can be linked to 
population dynamics. However, they have rarely been studied quantitatively in 
free-ranging animals. We investigated foraging strategies and efficiencies of 
wild northern fur seals Callorhinus ursinus during their breeding season to 
understand potential links to the observed population decline in the Bering 
Sea. We equipped 20 lactating females with biologgers to determine at-sea 
foraging behaviours. We measured energy expenditure while foraging using the 
doubly-labelled water method, and energy gained using (1) the types and energy 
densities of prey consumed, and (2) the number of prey capture attempts (from 
acceleration data). Our results show that seals employed 2 foraging strategies: 
one group (40%) fed mostly in oceanic waters on small, high energy-density 
prey, while the other (60%) stayed over the shallow continental shelf feeding 
mostly on larger, lower quality fish. Females foraging in oceanic waters 
captured 3 times more prey, and had double the foraging efficiencies of females 
that foraged on-shelf in neritic waters. However, neritic seals made 
comparatively shorter trips, and likely fed their pups ~20 to 25% more 
frequently. The presence of these strategies which either favor foraging 
efficiency (energy) or frequency of nursing (time) might be maintained in the 
population because they have similar net fitness outcomes. However, neither 
strategy appears to simultaneously maximize time and energy allocated to 
nursing, with potential impacts on the survival of pups during their first year 
at sea.

Best wishes,

Tiphaine Jeanniard-du-Dot


Tiphaine Jeanniard-du-Dot, PhD
Fisheries and Oceans Canada/Marine mammal biology and conservation
Institut Maurice-Lamontagne
850 Route de la Mer, P.O. Box 1000
Mont-Joli, QC, G5H 3Z4, CANADA
Cell:+1-604-724-4230<tel:(604)%20724-4230> / Fax: 
+1-418-775-0740<tel:(418)%20775-0740>
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