Abstract

AbstractPhocid seal pups must learn successful survival strategies, largely independently, following their abrupt weaning at a relatively young age. To explore the ontogeny of aquatic skills, space use and first‐year habitat choices made by harbor seals, pups (n = 30) were instrumented with satellite relay data loggers (SRDLs) in Svalbard, Norway in 2009 and 2010. Initially, the pups had small home ranges and showed rapid changes in their activity budgets and diving capabilities, displaying steep linear increases in diving depth and duration and in the amount of time spent diving. Most pups underwent an abrupt shift in movement patterns at ca. 50 d of age, which likely marked the end of the postweaning fast. Around this same time, the steep progression in diving performance slowed, though longer, deeper dives gradually became the norm. However, bottom time, ascent and descent rates, and postdive recovery times remained stable after the postweaning fast, suggesting that most aquatic skill acquisition was completed during the first months of life. Few clear effects of environmental variables such as upwelling phenomenon, which are known to influence the diving behavior of adults from the same population, were detected in the diving patterns of pups.

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