Abstract

Seasonal resource pulses can have enormous impacts on species interactions. In marine ecosystems, air-breathing predators often drive their prey to deeper waters. However, it is unclear how ephemeral resource pulses such as near-surface phytoplankton blooms alter the vertical trade-off between predation avoidance and resource availability in consumers, and how these changes cascade to the diving behaviour of top predators. We integrated data on Weddell seal diving behaviour, diet stable isotopes, feeding success and mass gain to examine shifts in vertical foraging throughout ice break-out and the resulting phytoplankton bloom each year. We also tested hypotheses about the likely location of phytoplankton bloom origination (advected or produced in situ where seals foraged) based on sea ice break-out phenology and advection rates from several locations within 150 km of the seal colony. In early summer, seals foraged at deeper depths resulting in lower feeding rates and mass gain. As sea ice extent decreased throughout the summer, seals foraged at shallower depths and benefited from more efficient energy intake. Changes in diving depth were not due to seasonal shifts in seal diets or horizontal space use and instead may reflect a change in the vertical distribution of prey. Correspondence between the timing of seal shallowing and the resource pulse was variable from year to year and could not be readily explained by our existing understanding of the ocean and ice dynamics. Phytoplankton advection occurred faster than ice break-out, and seal dive shallowing occurred substantially earlier than local break-out. While there remains much to be learned about the marine ecosystem, it appears that an increase in prey abundance and accessibility via shallower distributions during the resource pulse could synchronize life-history phenology across trophic levels in this high-latitude ecosystem.

Highlights

  • The loss of predators [1,2] and shifting resource availability due to climate change and habitat alterations [3,4] have underscored the importance of resource pulses in structuring spatial use by various trophic levels [5,6]

  • We show that in Antarctic summer, ice break-out and the resulting resource pulse are associated with increased energy transfer to top predators

  • Vertical redistributions of food chains are analogous to the horizontal migrations documented in other ecosystems [79,80] and appear to be an important driver of reproductive phenology in many air-breathing vertebrate predators including penguins, seals and seabirds

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Summary

Introduction

The loss of predators [1,2] and shifting resource availability due to climate change and habitat alterations [3,4] have underscored the importance of resource pulses in structuring spatial use by various trophic levels [5,6]. The approximately 20-fold increase in phytoplankton biomass concentrates zooplankton and fishes in the marginal ice zone [18,19,20,21,22] This resource pulse facilitates reproduction [23] and survival [24] of individuals across species and trophic levels [25]. It is important to understand how ecological dynamics vary across time and three-dimensional space

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