Dear MARMAM'rs,

My co-authors and I are so excited to share our new paper on leopard seals:

Kienle, S. S., Goebel, M., LaBrecque, E., Borras-Chavez, R., Trumble, S.
J., Kanatous, S. B., Crocerk, D. E. & Costa, D. P. Plasticity in the
morphometrics and movements of an Antarctic apex predator, the leopard
seal. *Frontiers in Marine Science*, 1540.

Abstract:

Animals that display plasticity in behavioral, ecological, and
morphological traits are better poised to cope with environmental
disturbances. Here, we examined individual plasticity and intraspecific
variation in the morphometrics, movement patterns, and dive behavior of an
enigmatic apex predator, the leopard seal (Hydrurga leptonyx).
Satellite/GPS tags and time depth recorders were deployed on 22 leopard
seals off the Western Antarctic Peninsula. Adult female leopard seals were
significantly larger (454±59 kg) and longer (302±11 cm) than adult males
(302 ±22 kg, 276±11 cm). As females were 50% larger than their male
counterparts, leopard seals are therefore one of the most extreme examples
of female biased sexual size dimorphism in marine mammals. Female leopard
seals also spent more time hauled-out on land and ice than males. In the
austral spring/summer, three adult female leopard seals hauled-out on ice
for 10+ days, which likely represent the first satellite tracks of
parturition and lactation for the species. While we found sex-based
differences in morphometrics and haul out durations, other variables, including
maximum distance traveled and dive parameters, did not vary by sex. Regardless
of sex, some leopard seals remained in near-shore habitats, traveling less
than 50 kilometers, while other leopard seals traveled up to 1,700
kilometers away from the tagging location.Overall, leopard sealswere short
(3.0±0.7 min) and shallow (29±8 m) divers. However, within this general
pattern, some individual leopard seals primarily used short, shallow dives,
while others switched between short, shallow dives and long, deep dives. We
also recorded the single deepest and longest dive made by any leopard seal—1,
256 meters for 25 minutes. Together, our results showcased high plasticity
among leopard seals tagged in a single location. These flexible behaviors
and traits may offer leopard seals, an ice associated apex predator,
resilience to the rapidly changing Southern Ocean.

It is freely available here:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2022.976019/full.
Please email
me (sarah_kie...@baylor.edu) if you cannot access it.

Cheers,
Sarah S. Kienle
Department of Biology
Baylor University
Kienle Lab <https://www.sarahskienle.com/>
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