Abstract

In the Barents Sea, strong top predator responses to repeated stock collapses of the forage fish capelin Mallotus villosus have been observed. The white-beaked dolphin Lagenorhynchus albirostris, a flexible predator with a diverse diet in other marine systems, has been associated with capelin in the Barents Sea. Yet, their distribution and foraging ecology in this ecosystem remain largely unknown. Here we use synoptically collected dolphin and prey spatial data to investigate the dolphins' distribution and spatial associations with potential prey species, including the spatial responses to a capelin stock collapse of 2003–2006 and recovery in 2007–2009. Since dolphin–prey associations may be scale-dependent, analyses were conducted at two spatial scales: (1) the habitat scale, by investigating spatial associations between species distributions averaged across years, and (2) the mesoscale, by investigating spatial associations within 50 × 50 km grid cells. At the habitat scale, dolphins overlapped with different prey species in different parts of their habitat. At the mesoscale, the dolphins were associated with blue whiting in southern Atlantic waters, while no prey associations were identified in the Polar Front area, where both capelin and gadoids are abundant. The poor dolphin–prey associations in this area could indicate dolphin distributions spatially constrained by physiological limitations, habitat productivity, or niche partitioning. No strong dolphin responses to capelin collapse and recovery were observed, indicating sufficient availability of alternative prey during the collapse.

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