Dear colleagues,
I'm please to announce the publication of our manuscript "Inferred foraging 
locations and water masses preferred by spotted seals Phoca largha and bearded 
seals Erignathus barbatus" in Marine Ecology Progress Series.

https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13145 (https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13145)

Gryba RD, Wiese FK, Kelly BP, Von Duyke AL, Pickart RS, Stockwell DA (2019) 
Inferring foraging locations and water masses preferred by spotted seals Phoca 
largha and bearded seals Erignathus barbatus. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 631:209-224.

ABSTRACT: Spotted seals Phoca largha and bearded seals Erignathus barbatus are 
ice-associated seals that have overlapping range in the Beaufort, Chukchi, and 
Bering Seas, but have different foraging ecologies. The link between foraging 
behaviour and specific oceanographic variables is not well understood for these 
species, nor is the influence of different dive metrics when modelling their 
foraging behaviour. To explore the value of different dive metrics to estimate 
foraging behaviour, and the relationships between foraging and water 
bodies/oceanographic variables, we tagged 3 spotted seals and 2 bearded seals 
with satellite telemetry tags that recorded movement and oceanographic data. To 
infer foraging behaviour, we included dive metrics in Bayesian state-space 
switching models, and found that models that included depth-corrected dive 
duration were more parsimonious than models that included dive shape. The 
addition of vertical movements to the model enabled better determination of 
foraging areas (inferred from area-restricted searches) and provided insights 
into the probabilities of switching between foraging and transiting behaviours. 
The collection of oceanographic data in situ at a scale relevant to seals 
helped identify water masses, and how they were used, and potential 
oceanographic cues used by seals to identify foraging locations. Fine-scale 
spatiotemporal clustering analysis revealed spotted and bearded seal foraging 
‘hotspots’ in the Chukchi and Bering Seas that overlap with hotspots identified 
for other marine mammals and marine birds.

Please feel free to contact me at r.gr...@stat.ubc.ca 
(mailto:r.gr...@stat.ubc.ca) if you would like to request a copy.

Best,

Rowenna
---------
Rowenna Gryba, MSc
PhD Student
Statistical Ecology Research Group
University of British Columbia
Vancouver
xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) Territory
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