Abstract

Diet composition of grey seals in the Gulf of St. Lawrence (Gulf) and around the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, was examined using identification of otoliths recovered from digestive tracts. Prey were recovered from 632 animals. Twenty-nine different prey taxa were identified. Grey seals sampled in the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence fed mainly on capelin, mackerel, wolffish and lumpfish during the spring, but consumed more cod, sandlance and winter flounder during late summer. Overall, the southern Gulf diet was more diverse, with sandlance, Atlantic cod, cunner, white hake and Atlantic herring dominating the diet. Capelin and winter flounder were the dominant prey in grey seals sampled from the east coast of Newfoundland, while Atlantic cod, flatfish and capelin were the most important prey from the south coast. Animals consumed prey with an average length of 20.4 cm (Range 4.2-99.2 cm). Capelin were the shortest prey (Mean = 13.9 cm, SE = 0.08, N = 1126), while wolffish were the longest with the largest fish having an estimated length of 99.2 cm (Mean = 59.4, SE = 2.8, N = 63). In the early 1990s most cod fisheries in Atlantic Canada were closed because of the collapse of the stocks. Since then they have shown limited sign of recovery. Diet samples from the west coast of Newfoundland indicate a decline in the contribution of cod to the diet from the pre-collapse to the postcollapse period, while samples from the southern Gulf indicate little change in the contribution of cod.

Highlights

  • Marine mammals are often considered as important consumers because of their large size and abundance, which may lead to their having an important influence on the structure and function of marine ecosystems (Bowen 1997, Savenkoff et al 2004a, Morissette et al 2006)

  • We did not measure eroded otoliths because suggested correction factors to adjust otolith lengths to account for partial digestion are quite variable and when this variability is taken into account, considerable uncertainty to estimates of diet composition is added (Hammond and Rothery 1996)

  • In the Northwest Atlantic grey seal population reproduction occurs from late December until mid-February (Mansfield and Beck 1977)

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Marine mammals are often considered as important consumers because of their large size and abundance, which may lead to their having an important influence on the structure and function of marine ecosystems (Bowen 1997, Savenkoff et al 2004a, Morissette et al 2006). The consumption of commercially valuable species, by marine mammals, has the potential to reduce their commercial yield (Bogstad et al 1997) and in areas where commercial stocks are quite low, predation by seals may slow their recovery (Bundy 2001, Chouinard et al 2005) Evaluating this impact is complex because information is needed on both predator and prey populations as well as the functional relationships between them (Hammill and Stenson 2000, Yodzis 1994). The coasts around Newfoundland and the southern Gulf coastal areas of New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia between 1985 and 2004

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call