Abstract

Development of competent diving ability is critical to obtaining nutritional independence in marine mammals such as Steller sea lions (SSLs), Eumetopias jubatus (Schreber, 1776). We studied diving performance in pup (75) and juvenile (36) SSLs using satellite data recorders. In general, dives by SSLs were brief and shallow. Overall, 82.3% of dives were <2 min long and 86.9% of dives were <10 m deep. Long (>5 min) and deep dives (>100 m) constituted only 2.49% and 0.77%, respectively, of total dives. We used linear mixed-effects models to investigate the relationships between the response variables maximum-daily-depth, time-at-depth, mean-dive-duration, dive rate, and time-at-sea and the predictor variables age, sex, population (eastern and western Alaska populations), time-of-day, and month-of-year. All response variables except dive rate were positively related (P < 0.05) to age. Dive rate declined (P < 0.001) with age. Time-of-day, month, population, sex, and some first-order interactions were all significantly (P < 0.05) related to some measure of diving performance. With large samples we were able to identify significant relationships between the response variables and the predictor variables, even though the total amount of variation explained by the models was low, because most dives were short and shallow regardless of age, sex, population, time-of-day, or month-of-year. Depths and durations of dives by juvenile animals increased throughout the range of ages studied and were similar to or greater than those previously reported for juveniles and adult females. We expect maximum depths and durations to continue to increase with age until body mass plateaus at about 10 years of age. Therefore, we expect older animals to be more efficient foragers, as they would have greater aerobic dive limits as well as more experience locating and capturing prey.

Full Text
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