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Return Customers: Foraging Site Fidelity and the Effect of Environmental Variability in Wide-Ranging Antarctic Fur Seals

Strategies employed by wide-ranging foraging animals involve consideration of habitat quality and predictability and should maximise net energy gain. Fidelity to foraging sites is common in areas of high resource availability or where predictable changes in resource availability occur. However, if r...

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Autores principales: Arthur, Benjamin, Hindell, Mark, Bester, Marthan, Trathan, Phil, Jonsen, Ian, Staniland, Iain, Oosthuizen, W. Chris, Wege, Mia, Lea, Mary-Anne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4373865/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25807082
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120888
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author Arthur, Benjamin
Hindell, Mark
Bester, Marthan
Trathan, Phil
Jonsen, Ian
Staniland, Iain
Oosthuizen, W. Chris
Wege, Mia
Lea, Mary-Anne
author_facet Arthur, Benjamin
Hindell, Mark
Bester, Marthan
Trathan, Phil
Jonsen, Ian
Staniland, Iain
Oosthuizen, W. Chris
Wege, Mia
Lea, Mary-Anne
author_sort Arthur, Benjamin
collection PubMed
description Strategies employed by wide-ranging foraging animals involve consideration of habitat quality and predictability and should maximise net energy gain. Fidelity to foraging sites is common in areas of high resource availability or where predictable changes in resource availability occur. However, if resource availability is heterogeneous or unpredictable, as it often is in marine environments, then habitat familiarity may also present ecological benefits to individuals. We examined the winter foraging distribution of female Antarctic fur seals, Arctocephalus gazelle, over four years to assess the degree of foraging site fidelity at two scales; within and between years. On average, between-year fidelity was strong, with most individuals utilising more than half of their annual foraging home range over multiple years. However, fidelity was a bimodal strategy among individuals, with five out of eight animals recording between-year overlap values of greater than 50%, while three animals recorded values of less than 5%. High long-term variance in sea surface temperature, a potential proxy for elevated long-term productivity and prey availability, typified areas of overlap. Within-year foraging site fidelity was weak, indicating that successive trips over the winter target different geographic areas. We suggest that over a season, changes in prey availability are predictable enough for individuals to shift foraging area in response, with limited associated energetic costs. Conversely, over multiple years, the availability of prey resources is less spatially and temporally predictable, increasing the potential costs of shifting foraging area and favouring long-term site fidelity. In a dynamic and patchy environment, multi-year foraging site fidelity may confer a long-term energetic advantage to the individual. Such behaviours that operate at the individual level have evolutionary and ecological implications and are potential drivers of niche specialization and modifiers of intra-specific competition.
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spelling pubmed-43738652015-03-27 Return Customers: Foraging Site Fidelity and the Effect of Environmental Variability in Wide-Ranging Antarctic Fur Seals Arthur, Benjamin Hindell, Mark Bester, Marthan Trathan, Phil Jonsen, Ian Staniland, Iain Oosthuizen, W. Chris Wege, Mia Lea, Mary-Anne PLoS One Research Article Strategies employed by wide-ranging foraging animals involve consideration of habitat quality and predictability and should maximise net energy gain. Fidelity to foraging sites is common in areas of high resource availability or where predictable changes in resource availability occur. However, if resource availability is heterogeneous or unpredictable, as it often is in marine environments, then habitat familiarity may also present ecological benefits to individuals. We examined the winter foraging distribution of female Antarctic fur seals, Arctocephalus gazelle, over four years to assess the degree of foraging site fidelity at two scales; within and between years. On average, between-year fidelity was strong, with most individuals utilising more than half of their annual foraging home range over multiple years. However, fidelity was a bimodal strategy among individuals, with five out of eight animals recording between-year overlap values of greater than 50%, while three animals recorded values of less than 5%. High long-term variance in sea surface temperature, a potential proxy for elevated long-term productivity and prey availability, typified areas of overlap. Within-year foraging site fidelity was weak, indicating that successive trips over the winter target different geographic areas. We suggest that over a season, changes in prey availability are predictable enough for individuals to shift foraging area in response, with limited associated energetic costs. Conversely, over multiple years, the availability of prey resources is less spatially and temporally predictable, increasing the potential costs of shifting foraging area and favouring long-term site fidelity. In a dynamic and patchy environment, multi-year foraging site fidelity may confer a long-term energetic advantage to the individual. Such behaviours that operate at the individual level have evolutionary and ecological implications and are potential drivers of niche specialization and modifiers of intra-specific competition. Public Library of Science 2015-03-25 /pmc/articles/PMC4373865/ /pubmed/25807082 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120888 Text en © 2015 Arthur et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Arthur, Benjamin
Hindell, Mark
Bester, Marthan
Trathan, Phil
Jonsen, Ian
Staniland, Iain
Oosthuizen, W. Chris
Wege, Mia
Lea, Mary-Anne
Return Customers: Foraging Site Fidelity and the Effect of Environmental Variability in Wide-Ranging Antarctic Fur Seals
title Return Customers: Foraging Site Fidelity and the Effect of Environmental Variability in Wide-Ranging Antarctic Fur Seals
title_full Return Customers: Foraging Site Fidelity and the Effect of Environmental Variability in Wide-Ranging Antarctic Fur Seals
title_fullStr Return Customers: Foraging Site Fidelity and the Effect of Environmental Variability in Wide-Ranging Antarctic Fur Seals
title_full_unstemmed Return Customers: Foraging Site Fidelity and the Effect of Environmental Variability in Wide-Ranging Antarctic Fur Seals
title_short Return Customers: Foraging Site Fidelity and the Effect of Environmental Variability in Wide-Ranging Antarctic Fur Seals
title_sort return customers: foraging site fidelity and the effect of environmental variability in wide-ranging antarctic fur seals
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4373865/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25807082
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120888
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