4.2 Article

Adaptive coat colour polymorphism in the Kermode bear of coastal British Columbia

Journal

BIOLOGICAL JOURNAL OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY
Volume 98, Issue 3, Pages 479-488

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.2009.01306.x

Keywords

conspicuousness; evasive behaviour; genetic variation; multiniche; nocturnal foraging; salmon; underwater vision; Ursus americanus kermodei

Funding

  1. David Suzuki Foundation
  2. National Science and Engineering Research Council [NRC 2354]
  3. Industrial Scholarship
  4. Hartley Bay Band Council

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We investigated potential ecological attributes of the striking coat colour polymorphism in the black bear (Ursus americanus kermodei Hornaday) occurring on several small islands off the mid-coast of British Columbia, where a white morph (Kermode), fully recessive to the black morph, reaches 10-25% of the population. During three autumn field seasons (2000-2002; 697 h of observation time), we monitored salmon capture behaviour of individual bears (black, N = 37; white, N = 4). Both colour morphs foraged on salmon throughout daylight and darkness but with twice the rate during darkness. Log-linear analysis of capture efficiency (success/attempts) and average capture success per bout of the white morph was marginally lower than the black morph during darkness (22.8%, N = 158 versus 25.8%, N = 279 respectively; P < 0.04), although it was significantly higher during daylight (34.1%, N = 132 versus 25.3%, N = 896, respectively, P < 0.02), with similar trends in three different pursuit modes. Replicated (N = 10-14) field experiments involving a colour dimorphic simulated predator (i.e. human in a black or white cloak) showed that salmon were one-half as evasive during darkness than during daylight, with no differences (P > 0.4) in response to either the white or black models; however, during daylight, salmon were twice as evasive to the black compared to the white model (P < 0.001). The persistence of this coat colour polymorphism may be facilitated by increased salmon accessibility to the Kermode bear and diel foraging differences between morphs. These results are consistent with multi-niche models of adaptive variability. (C) 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 2009, 98, 479-488.

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