Abstract

Ringed seals (Phoca hispida) in Thesiger Bay (about 71 °45'N, 125°00'W), in northwestern Amundsen Gulf in the western Canadian Arctic, suffered a failure of pup production in the years before 1987, starting probably in 1984. Pups taken in the summer hunt in the years before 1987 were reported scarce, and in 1987 were only 2.8% of the total 4+ and older. This low reproduction was associated with poor body condition in females and with an age distribution of adults that was weighted toward older animals (the modal year class was the 8+ class). An unusually high proportion of adult females had never reproduced; the median age of first birth was estimated at 8.6 years. By the summer of 1988 the age distribution had changed toward younger animals (modal age 5+), in better condition (by 20%), which had almost all ovulated. Pups were more numerous in the catch. In 1989 pups were very numerous in the catch (142% of the 4+ adults) and the estimated mean ageof first birth had decreased to 5.3 years; almost all 5-year-olds sampled had borne pups. A similar occurrence of low pup production had been documented in the early 1970s, and resumption of reproductive activity had then also been associated with an apparent turnover of the population, the mean age of adults decreasing from 16-17 years when reproduction was low to 10.9 years in the year before reproduction resumed. Long-term data on ringed seals in the western Canadian Arctic has shown an average age at first ovulation of about 5.55 years and first birth just before age 7, about 1 year older than seen in this sample in 1989. Our 1989 sample may have been able to mature earlier because food was temporarily more abundant, or breeding densities temporarily lower, than long-term average values.

Highlights

  • Optimal strategy for genetic survival indicates that organisms will forgo or defer reproduction in marginal conditions, rather than compromise survival by unsuccessful attempts to raise young

  • By the first week of June in 1988, the west coast of Banks Island to about 70-100km offshore, Thesiger Bay, and Amundsen Gulf were clear of ice save for a few large floes of thick first-year ice

  • In 1989, break-up started in Amundsen Gulf about 14 June

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Summary

Introduction

Optimal strategy for genetic survival indicates that organisms will forgo or defer reproduction in marginal conditions, rather than compromise survival by unsuccessful attempts to raise young. This article documents an occurrence of reproductive failure in the ringed seals of north-western Amundsen Gulf in the western Canadian Arctic (Fig. 1) in the rnid- to late 1980s, and relates it to an apparent shift in the age distribution of the local population of adult seals as well as a change in an index of body condition This short-term investigation-samples were taken from the hunt in 1987, 88 and 89 - was prompted by reports from Inuk hunters at Sachs Harbour, Northwest Territories (N.W.T.) in the mid-1980s that young seals were absent from the hunting areas and were taken in unusually low numbers. They were concerned about possible causes, including industrial development in the Beaufort Sea and other areas of the westem Canadian Arctic, and feared a permanent drop in the productivity of ringed seals

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