Abstract

The goal of this study was to model haul-out behavior of harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) in the Hood Canal region of Washington State with respect to changes in physiological, environmental, and temporal covariates. Previous research has provided a solid understanding of seal haul-out behavior. Here, we expand on that work using a generalized linear mixed model (GLMM) with temporal autocorrelation and a large dataset. Our dataset included behavioral haul-out records from archival and VHF radio tag deployments on 25 individual seals representing 61,430 seal hours. A novel application for increased computational efficiency allowed us to examine this large dataset with a GLMM that appropriately accounts for temporal autocorellation. We found significant relationships with the covariates hour of day, day of year, minutes from high tide and year. Additionally, there was a significant effect of the interaction term hour of day : day of year. This interaction term demonstrated that seals are more likely to haul out during nighttime hours in August and September, but then switch to predominantly daylight haul-out patterns in October and November. We attribute this change in behavior to an effect of human disturbance levels. This study also examined a unique ecological event to determine the role of increased killer whale (Orcinus orca) predation on haul-out behavior. In 2003 and 2005 these harbor seals were exposed to unprecedented levels of killer whale predation and results show an overall increase in haul-out probability after exposure to killer whales. The outcome of this study will be integral to understanding any changes in population abundance as a result of increased killer whale predation.

Highlights

  • Harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) are one of the most abundant and widespread pinnipeds in the eastern North Pacific Ocean

  • This study presents data from archival time-depth recorders (TDR) deployed and recovered from harbor seals in Hood Canal during the pupping and early molting periods in 2002 and in 2005

  • Of the TDRs deployed on harbor seals within Hood Canal, 25 (12 in 2002 and 13 in 2005) were recovered with data records usable for analysis (Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) are one of the most abundant and widespread pinnipeds in the eastern North Pacific Ocean. Throughout their range, harbor seals haul out at near-shore sites on a regular basis and have a moderate level of fidelity to those sites. The relative importance of these behaviors and physiological functions changes over time and differs between ages and the sexes [6,7]. At any given time, only a portion of the population will be ashore and that proportion changes with respect to these environmental variables, physiological functions and behaviors. The goal of this study was to model the haul-out behavior of harbor seals with respect to changes in demographic, environmental and temporal covariates

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