Dear Marmam,

We are pleased to share a new open-access paper describing hormones and
individual foraging strategies in Galapagos sea lions. Please find the link
to the original manuscript or Researchgate page below:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/ece3.7590

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/351285913
<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/351285913_Hormone-mediated_foraging_strategies_in_an_uncertain_environment_Insights_into_the_at-sea_behavior_of_a_marine_predator>

Abstract:
1. Hormones are extensively known to be physiological mediators of energy
mobilization and allow animals to adjust behavioral performance in response
to their environment, especially within a foraging context.
2. Few studies, however, have narrowed focus toward the consistency of
hormonal patterns and their impact on individual foraging behavior.
Describing these relationships can further our understanding of how
individuals cope with heterogeneous environments and exploit different
ecological niches.
3. To address this, we measured between-and within-individual variation of
basal cortisol (CORT), thyroid hormone T3, and testosterone (TEST) levels
in wild adult female Galapagos sea lions (Zalophus wollebaeki) and analyzed
how these hormones may be associated with foraging strategies. In this
marine predator, females exhibit one of three spatially and temporally
distinct foraging patterns (i.e., "benthic," "pelagic," and "night" divers)
within diverse habitat types.
4. Night divers differentiated from other strategies by having lower T3
levels. Considering metabolic costs, night divers may represent an
energetically conservative strategy with shorter dive durations, depths,
and descent rates to exploit prey which migrate up the water column based
on vertical diel patterns. 5. Intriguingly, CORT and TEST levels were
highest in benthic divers, a strategy characterized by congregating around
limited, shallow seafloors to specialize on confined yet reliable prey.
This pattern may reflect hormone-mediated behavioral responses to specific
risks in these habitats, such as high competition with con-specifics, prey
predictability, or greater risks of predation.
6. Overall, our study highlights the collective effects of hormonal and
ecological variation on marine foraging. In doing so, we provide insights
into how mechanistic constraints and environmental pressures may facilitate
individual specialization in adaptive behavior in wild populations.

Best regards,
Geno

-- 
Geno DeRango
PhD Student
Department of Animal Behaviour
Bielefeld University
Galapagos sea lion Project
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to