Abstract

We studied the migrations of young spotted seals during their annual cycle. In May 2017, we attached satellite tags (SPOT-293A) to three individuals (two underyearlings and one yearling) captured at their breeding ground in Peter the Great Bay, western Sea of Japan/East Sea. The operational time of the installed tags ranged from 207 to 333 days; a total of 27195 locations were uploaded. All three seals migrated east and further north along the coast of the mainland. The average daily migration speed of the seals ranged between 70 and 135 km/day. The yearling moved faster than the underyearlings. During early August, they arrived at their summer habitats, which were located in the northern part of the Tatar Strait (Sea of Japan/East Sea) for the underyearling seals and in Aniva Bay (Sea of Okhotsk) for the yearling seal. While moving from the place of tagging to the summer feeding grounds, the seals covered a distance of 2300 to 3100 km. From August to October, each seal permanently stayed within the same isolated area. The reverse migration of all three seals began in November. When the seals traveled south, they used the same routes by which they had moved north in the spring, but they moved at a faster speed. By December, two seals returned to their natal islands, where both stayed until their transmitters stopped sending signals (in March 2018).

Highlights

  • The spotted seal (Phoca largha), sometimes referred to as the largha seal, is a pinniped species inhabiting the northern Pacific Ocean and the adjacent Arctic seas [1]

  • Spotted seals are most common in the Sea of Okhotsk and the Bering Sea, where up to 95% of the world’s spotted seal population is concentrated, and the distribution of seals during the year is characterized by pronounced interseasonal variations [2, 3]

  • Feeding migrations of young spotted seals born in Peter the Great Bay begin immediately after the completion of the molt that occurs at the coastal haul-out sites on the islands of the Rimsky-Korsakov Archipelago

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Summary

Introduction

The spotted seal (Phoca largha), sometimes referred to as the largha seal, is a pinniped species inhabiting the northern Pacific Ocean and the adjacent Arctic seas [1]. Spotted seals are most common in the Sea of Okhotsk and the Bering Sea, where up to 95% of the world’s spotted seal population is concentrated, and the distribution of seals during the year is characterized by pronounced interseasonal variations [2, 3]. During the breeding season in the Sea of Okhotsk and the Bering Sea, spotted seals aggregate on pack ice, mainly in the shelf-edge zone. Migrations of young spotted seals (Phoca largha) from Peter the Great Bay. The study was performed as part of Joint Committee on Environmental Cooperation between the Government of the Republic of Korea and the Government of the Russian Federation (K-R-10-02, Korea-Russia bilateral cooperation on the conservation of pinnipeds)

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