Tugidak Island, located in the Gulf of Alaska, was once the site of one of largest local concentrations of harbor seals (Phoca vitulina richardsi) in the world. This population, which probably consisted of about 20,500 animals in the mid‐1960s declined by about 85% between 1976 and 1988. The population appeared to decline more rapidly during the late 1970s than during the 1980s. Causes for the decline are not apparent. There appear to be both similarities and dissimilarities between this decline and recent declines in abundance of northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) and Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska.
Pitcher. 2011. Cohort effects and spatial variation in age-specific survival of Steller sea lions from southeastern Alaska.Ecosphere 2(10):111. doi:10.1890/ES11-00215.1Abstract. Information concerning mechanistic processes underlying changes in vital rates and ultimately population growth rate is required to monitor impacts of environmental change on wildlife. We estimated age-specific survival and examined factors influencing survival for a threatened population of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in southeastern Alaska. We used mark-recapture models and data from 1,995 individuals marked at approximately one month of age at four of five rookeries in southeastern Alaska, and resighted from Oregon to the Bering Sea. Average annual survival probability for females was 0.64 for pups and 0.77 for yearlings, and increased from 0.91 to 0.96 from age 3-7 yrs. Annual survival probability of males averaged 0.60 for pups and 0.88 by 7 yrs, resulting in probability of survival to age 7, 33% lower for males compared to females. Pups from northern southeastern Alaska (including an area of low summer population size but rapid growth) were twice as likely to survive to age 7 compared to pups from southern rookeries (including a large, historical, stable rookery). Effects of early conditions on future fitness were observed as (1) environmental conditions in the birth year equally affected first-and secondyear survival, and (2) effects of body mass at approximately one month of age were still apparent at 7 yrs. Survival from 0-2 yrs varied among five cohorts by a maximum absolute difference of 0.12. We observed survival costs for long-distance dispersal for males, particularly as juveniles. However, survival was higher for non-pups that dispersed to northern southeastern Alaska, suggesting that moving to an area with greater productivity, greater safety, or lower population size may alleviate a poor start and provide a mechanism for spatial structure for sea lion populations.
Population declines of Steller sea lions (Eumetopias juhatus) in western Alaska (west of 144°W) may be a result of reduced juvenile survival. We used satellite telemetry to study the at‐sea distribution and movement patterns of pup (1.6–11.9 mo) and juvenile (12.0–35.1 mo) Steller sea lions. We studied trip distance, duration, and interhaul‐out movements of sea lions in relation to age, sex, and month of year in the decreasing western population (WP; Prince William Sound, Kodiak, Aleutian Islands, Alaska) and the increasing eastern population (EP; Southeast Alaska). We deployed 103 satellite transmitters (29 WP; 74 EP) on sea lions between 1998 and 2001. Round trip distance and duration increased with age, trip distance was greater in the WP than the EP, trip duration was greater for females than males, and haul‐out use was clustered. Changes in round trip distance and duration occurred from April to June for all age classes studied indicating that the annual timing of weaning may be less variable than the age of weaning. Overall, 90% of round trips were ≤ 15 km from haul‐outs and 84% were <20 h, indicating nearshore areas adjacent to haulouts are critical to the developing juvenile.
We examined the reproductive performance of female Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in order to evaluate the hypothesis that low pup production was associated with nutritional stress and to assess whether reduced birth rates could have been a factor in a recent large-scale decline in numbers. Nearly all (97%) sexually mature females were pregnant during early gestation. However, by late gestation, pregnancy rates had declined to 67 and 55% in the 1970s and 1980s, respectively, owing to reproductive failures. We found that body condition, as depicted by mass index and blubber index, had a positive effect on the probability that a female would be pregnant during late gestation. Age, age2, and lactation were also associated with pregnancy status during late gestation. These findings support the hypotheses that reproductive failures were associated with lowered nutritional status and that the resulting low birth rates were a proximate factor in the decline. We speculate that abortion is a part of the reproductive strategy of the female Steller sea lion that enhances overall reproductive performance during times of suboptimal nutrition. A major shift in oceanic regime occurred in the Gulf of Alaska during the late 1970s that resulted in a reduction of about 50% in the overall biomass of fishes and a shift in species composition. Prey resources may not have been adequate to successfully support the Steller sea lions' "energetically expensive" reproductive/foraging strategy during the period of our study.
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