Seals quickly respond to gain and loss of habitat under climate change

July 10, 2009

Southern Elephant seals responded rapidly to climate and habitat change and established a new breeding site thousands of kilometres from existing breeding grounds, according to new research.

An international research team, including post-doctorate Dr Mark de Bruyn and collaborators from the US, South Africa and Italy, led by Professor Rus Hoelzel from the School of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, Durham University, found that when the Antarctic ice sheets of the Ross Sea Embayment retreated in the Holocene period 8,000 years ago, elephant seals, Mirounga leonina, adopted the emergent habitat and established a new population which flourished.

from the ancient remains of seals from the now extinct Antarctic colony showed high levels of genetic diversity, probably due to the very large sustained there. The study, published in the academic journal , and funded by the US National Science Foundation, shows how environmental change can drive the demographic and that determine diversity within and among species.

Tracking these processes during periods of change reveals mechanisms for the establishment of populations, and provides predictive data on response to potential future impacts, including those caused by climate change.

Professor Rus Hoelzel said: "In general, this approach of looking to the past to understand what might happen in the future, has good potential for predicting the impact of environmental change in both marine and terrestrial systems.

"We've shown how a highly mobile responded to the gain and loss of new breeding habitat. The new habitat was quickly adopted, probably because seals migrate annually into Antarctic waters to feed. However, when the ice returned and the habitat was lost, only a small proportion returned to the original source population. The Antarctic population crashed and much diversity was lost."

This habitat was released after the retreat of the grounded ice sheet in the Ross Sea Embayment 7,500-8,000 years ago, and is within the range of modern foraging excursions from the Macquarie Island colony. Using ancient mtDNA and evolutionary models, the research team tracked the population dynamics of the now extinct colony and the connectivity between this and modern breeding sites.

The team found clear signs of rapid expansion in the new colony 8,000 years ago. This was followed by directional migration away, coupled with a loss of diversity 1,000 years ago, when the sea ice is thought to have expanded. The data suggest that the new colony seals came initially from Macquarie Island, and that some returned there, but in much smaller numbers, when the new colony habitat was lost 7,000 years later.

In order to understand how biodiversity is generated and maintained over time, the team has set out to understand the process by which the seal populations formed and diverged. They analysed data from ancient DNA to show how elephant seal populations responded when new breeding habitat was gained and then lost over the course of approximately 7,000 years.

Professor Rus Hoelzel said: "Using ancient DNA, we were able to track the dynamics and diversity of a population from its foundation, through to its extinction, in the context of Holocene climate change. We learned that new habitat emerging within the species' migratory range could be quickly taken advantage of, but that the reverse was not true. The movement patterns of seals from this Antarctic breeding site would have been unlikely to take them near other potential breeding sites, and so when their breeding site was lost, their numbers crashed.

"The seals that discovered the new breeding site had things good, because food was abundant and nearby, however when the ice returned, the new colony collapsed and only a few seals made it back to their original home.

"This illustrates the importance of understanding the behaviour and life history of a species, in order to model how it may be able to respond to rapid change."

The key factors in the expansion of the new colony were likely to be the abundant local food resource and extensive physical habitat that allowed rapid expansion after the initial founder event, and a tendency for females to return to annual breeding sites in this species.

When the ice expanded again 1,000 years ago, the seals returned to their origins but in much smaller numbers.

Source: Durham University (news : web)


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  • deatopmg - Jul 10, 2009
    • Rank: 2.5 / 5 (2)
    So, as far as these guys are concerned - the sky isn't falling - until the earth's temperature drops again. The same is likely true for all the other species too.

    Less ice, more seals/less (always hungry) polar bears. More ice, less seals/more (always hungry) polar bears.
  • CWFlink - Jul 12, 2009
    • Rank: not rated yet
    Deatopma misses the point:
    Politicians WANT TO BELIEVE people are less capable of rational action than seals... it justifies increasing political power, and what politician doesn't want to be "empowered" relative to us ordinary folk?

    Reality is that green plants and algaes will bloom, adapting to increased CO2, digesting much of the industrial age surge in CO2. Root action will also crack and expose more stone to the higher levels of carbonic acid in rain, further moderating the CO2 surge.

    There will be some transient adjustments for mankind to make, but it will not be as massive as politicians are calling for.

    According to previous published research, the CO2 level in 1850 was "near starvation level" for much of the ecosystem. After a couple of hundred years, we'll edge back down to a more reasonable compromise between today's level and the level then.

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