Air-breathing vertebrates must balance their response to diel shifts in prey accessibility with physiological thresholds and the need to surface after each dive. Weddell seal (Leptonychotes weddellii) dive behaviors were tracked across the year under rapidly-changing light regimes in the Ross Sea, Antarctica ( ~ 75-77°S). This provides a ‘natural experiment’ with free-living seals experiencing 24-hrs of light (Polar Day), light/dark cycling, and continuous darkness (Polar Night). The Weddell seal’s temporal niche switches from nocturnal diving in the summer to diurnality for the remainder of the year. Rhythmicity in dive efforts (depth, duration, post-dive surface recuperation, bottom time, and exceeding physiologic thresholds) is stronger and more closely circadian during times of the year with light/dark cycling compared with Polar Day or Night. With light/dark cycling, animals also make the most extreme dives (those that far exceed the calculated aerobic dive limit, cADL) significantly earlier than solar noon. Offsetting the longest dives that require longer surface recuperation times from mid-day allows animals to maximize total dive time under high-light conditions conducive for visual hunting. We identify an optimal foraging strategy to exploit a diel preyscape in a highly-seasonal environment, while balancing tradeoffs imposed by physiological thresholds in a diving mammal.
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