4.3 Article

Bearded seal (Erignathus barbatus) vocalizations across seasons and habitat types in Svalbard, Norway

Journal

POLAR BIOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 7, Pages 1273-1287

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00300-021-02874-9

Keywords

Arctic; Breeding; Climate change; Mating period; Passive acoustic monitoring; Sea ice

Funding

  1. Norwegian Polar Institute
  2. Fram Centre MIKON programme
  3. Svalbard Environmental Protection Fund
  4. Svalbard Science Forum
  5. Fram Centre Incentive Fund
  6. Norwegian Research Council ARK Project [313676]
  7. EU FACE-IT programme [8691549]
  8. Sea ice in the Arctic Ocean, technology and governance, Fram Centre Flagship Programme [66050]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Male bearded seals use vocal displays to attract females and compete with other males during the mating season. Passive acoustic monitoring can be used to monitor breeding populations of this species. The study analyzed year-round acoustic data records from different sites in Svalbard to investigate seasonal variation in the acoustic presence of male bearded seals and the phenology of different call types.
Male bearded seals (Erignathus barbatus) use vocal displays to attract females and to compete with other males during the mating season. This makes it possible to monitor breeding populations of this species using passive acoustic monitoring (PAM). This study analysed year-round acoustic data records from AURAL instruments in Svalbard (Norway) to investigate seasonal variation in the acoustic presence of male bearded seals and the phenology of different call types (long, step and sweep trills) at three sites representing a variety of habitats with varied ice conditions. Male bearded seals vocalized for an extended period at a drift-ice site (Atwain; January-July) north of Spitsbergen, while the vocal season was shorter at a High Arctic land-fast-ice site (Rijpfjorden; February-June) and shorter yet again at a west-coast site that has undergone dramatic reductions in sea ice cover over the last 1.5 decades (Kongsfjorden; April-June). Generalized Additive Models showed marked seasonal segregation in the use of different trill types at Atwain, where call rates reached 400 per h, with long trills being the most numerous call type. Modest segregation of trill types was seen at Rijpfjorden, where call rates reached 300 per h, and no segregation occurred in Kongsfjorden (peak call rate 80 per h). Sea ice cover was available throughout the vocal season at Atwain and Rijpfjorden, while at Kongsfjorden peak vocal activity (May-June) occurred after the sea ice disappeared. Ongoing climate warming and sea ice reductions will likely increase the incidence of such mismatches and reduce breeding habitat for bearded seals.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available