Dear MARMAM community,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am pleased to share our recently published 
article in Functional Ecology, where we test the influence of light regime on 
diel activity patterns in a marine predator, using beluga whales as a model 
predator inhabiting a natural experimental setting (extreme light regimes of 
the Arctic).

Storrie, L., Hussey, N. E., MacPhee, S. A., O'Corry-Crowe, G., Iacozza, J., 
Barber, D. G. & Loseto, L. L. (2022) Empirically testing the influence of light 
regime on diel activity patterns in a marine predator reveals complex 
interacting factors shaping behaviour. Functional Ecology. 
https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.14172

Abstract
Diel cycles in marine predator diving behaviour centre around the 
light-mediated diel vertical migration (DVM) of prey, and are considered 
critical for optimizing foraging and limiting competition across global 
seascapes. Yet, our understanding of predator diel behaviour is based primarily 
on examining relative depth usage between constant day/night cycles with no 
formal investigation of how varying light regimes interact with abiotic factors 
to shape diel activity.
The extreme seasonal light regimes (midnight sun, polar night, day/night cycle) 
in the Arctic provide a unique natural experimental setting to empirically 
investigate the occurrence and intensity of diel behaviour in marine predators 
relative to changing light levels while concomitantly assessing interacting 
abiotic factors.
Depth time series data from satellite-linked tags deployed on six beluga whales 
(Delphinapterus leucas) for up to 12 months were used to quantify diel 
behaviour by calculating dissimilarity in time-at-depth between periods of low 
and high solar altitude on each day. Generalized additive mixed effects models 
were used to examine the influence of hours of daylight across extreme light 
cycles, coupled with bathymetry and sea ice concentration; focal diel patterns 
were further examined relative to the thermal structure of the water column.
As predicted, belugas exhibited cathemerality during the midnight sun, and 
initiated diel behaviour with the onset of the fall day/night cycle, with a 
marked increase in its intensity with the progression to equal day/night 
length. Occurrence of diel patterns, however, was complex; ceasing in regions 
with seafloor depths <700 m, and occurring with greatest intensity when the 
water column was thermally homogeneous within the upper 150 m.
Through empirical investigation, this study demonstrates that the onset of 
day/night light cycles and presumably associated prey DVM can modulate predator 
diel dive behaviour under certain circumstances, but highlights how the complex 
interaction of abiotic factors with light regime shape dynamic spatiotemporal 
patterns. These findings, building on a body of recent work, emphasize that the 
traditional view of the ubiquitous occurrence of diel behaviour tied to DVM at 
the base of the food web oversimplifies vertical predator–prey interactions, 
identifying the need for more structured investigation.

This article is freely available at https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.14172

All the best,
Luke Storrie

PhD Candidate
University of Manitoba
email: storr...@myumanitoba.ca



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