Individual-based energetic model suggests bottom up mechanisms for the impact of coastal hypoxia on Pacific harbor seal (Phoca vitulina richardii) foraging behavior
Authored by Sheanna Steingass, Markus Horning
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2017.01.006
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
STELLA
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Wind-driven coastal hypoxia represents an environmental stressor that
has the potential to drive redistribution of gilled marine organisms, and thereby indirectly affect the foraging characteristics of
air-breathing upper trophic-level predators. We used a conceptual
individual-based model to simulate effects of coastal hypoxia on the
spatial foraging behavior and efficiency of a marine mammal, the Pacific
harbor seal (Phoca vitulina richardi() on the Oregon coast. Habitat
compression of fish was simulated at varying intensities of hypoxia.
Modeled hypoxia affected up to 80\% of the water column and half of prey
species' horizontal habitat. Pacific sand lance (Ammodytes hexapterus), Pacific herring (Clupea pallasii), and English sole (Parophrys vetulus)
were selected as representative harbor seal prey species. Model outputs
most affected by coastal hypoxia were seal travel distance to foraging
sites, time spent at depth during foraging dives, and daily energy
balance.
For larger seals, English sole was the most optimal prey during
normoxia, however during moderate to severe hypoxia Pacific sand lance
was the most beneficial prey. For smaller seals, Pacific herring was the
most efficient prey species during normoxia, but sand lance became more
efficient as hypoxia increased. Sand lance represented the highest
increase in foraging efficiency during severe hypoxic events for all
seals. Results suggest that during increasing hypoxia, smaller adult
harbor seals could benefit by shifting from foraging on larger neritic
schooling fishes to foraging closer inshore on less energetically-dense
forage fish. Larger adult seals may benefit by shifting from foraging on
groundfish to smaller, schooling neritic fishes as hypoxia increases.
The model suggests a mechanism by which hypoxia may result in increased
foraging efficiency of Pacific harbor seals, and therefore increased
rates of predation on coastal fishes on the continental shelf during
hypoxic events.
Tags
Ecosystem
Oregon
Gulf-of-mexico
Foraging success
Vertical-distribution
California current system
Progressive hypoxia
Ammodytes-tobianus
Diving behavior
Demersal fishes
Lesser sandeel
Northern gulf
English sole
Upwelling
Conceptual
model