Publication | Closed Access
At-sea movements and habitat use of adult male Australian fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus)
48
Citations
34
References
2006
Year
Southeastern AustraliaFishery AssessmentEngineeringMovement PatternsMammalogyEvolutionary BiologyAdult Male OtariidsFishery ScienceMarine BiodiversityMarine EcologyMarine SystemsMarine BiologyHabitat UseWildlife BiologyAnimal BehaviorAt-sea Movements
Foraging by adult male otariids, a demographic component that often interacts with commercial fisheries, are poorly known. To assess movement patterns and habitat use, nine adult male Australian fur seals ( Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus Wood Jones, 1925) from Seal Rocks, in northern Bass Strait, southeastern Australia, were tracked for periods ranging from 66 to 223 d during 1999–2001. Mean ± SD at-sea and on-land durations were 6.9 ± 2.1 d (range 2.3–10.3 d, n = 9 seals) and 2.4 ± 0.9 d (range 0.8–4.1 d), respectively. All seals foraged almost exclusively in continental shelf waters and mostly (65%–97% of time at sea) in water columns that were between 40 and 100 m deep. Six of nine seals tracked for >30 d spent 64%–98% of their time-at-sea foraging at distances <200 km from Seal Rocks, although the maximum distance achieved from the colony was 1208 km. The seals’ foraging ranges overlapped with the ranges of operation of virtually all fin-fish fisheries in southeastern Australia, but fisheries overlap was low in the most frequented foraging area of central-western Bass Strait.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1