| Literature DB >> 20386691 |
John M Maniscalco1, Alan M Springer, Pamela Parker.
Abstract
Steller sea lions experienced a dramatic population collapse of more than 80% in the late 1970s through the 1990s across their western range in Alaska. One of several competing hypotheses about the cause holds that reduced female reproductive rates (natality) substantively contributed to the decline and continue to limit recovery in the Gulf of Alaska despite the fact that there have been very few attempts to directly measure natality in this species. We conducted a longitudinal study of natality among individual Steller sea lions (n = 151) at a rookery and nearby haulouts in Kenai Fjords, Gulf of Alaska during 2003-2009. Multi-state models were built and tested in Program MARK to estimate survival, resighting, and state transition probabilities dependent on whether or not a female gave birth in the previous year. The models that most closely fit the data suggested that females which gave birth had a higher probability of surviving and giving birth in the following year compared to females that did not give birth, indicating some females are more fit than others. Natality, estimated at 69%, was similar to natality for Steller sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska prior to their decline (67%) and much greater than the published estimate for the 2000s (43%) which was hypothesized from an inferential population dynamic model. Reasons for the disparity are discussed, and could be resolved by additional longitudinal estimates of natality at this and other rookeries over changing ocean climate regimes. Such estimates would provide an appropriate assessment of a key parameter of population dynamics in this endangered species which has heretofore been lacking. Without support for depressed natality as the explanation for a lack of recovery of Steller sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska, alternative hypotheses must be more seriously considered.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20386691 PMCID: PMC2851612 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Estimates of Steller sea lion natality from 3 different studies spanning 4 decades.
Kenai Fjords Steller sea lion multi-state mark-recapture models tested in Program MARK.
| Model | #Par | QAICc | ΔQAICc | Weight | QDeviance |
| Sst pst ψst | 6 | 698.062 | 0.00 | 0.456 | 235.592 |
| S. pst ψst | 5 | 698.151 | 0.09 | 0.436 | 237.751 |
| St pst ψst | 10 | 701.873 | 3.81 | 0.068 | 231.006 |
| Sst.t pst ψst | 16 | 703.552 | 5.49 | 0.029 | 219.715 |
| Sst pst ψst*t | 16 | 706.039 | 7.98 | 0.008 | 222.201 |
| Sst pst.t ψst | 16 | 708.604 | 10.54 | 0.002 | 224.767 |
| Sst pst ψ. | 5 | 715.785 | 17.72 | 0.000 | 255.385 |
| Sst pst*t ψst*t | 26 | 719.762 | 21.70 | 0.000 | 213.254 |
| Sst*t pst*t ψst*t | 36 | 727.001 | 28.94 | 0.000 | 196.396 |
Survival (S), resight probability (p), and state transition (ψ) were tested for effects of state (st; B/N), year (t), or neither (.). All models tested were based on ĉ = 1.10.
Figure 2Survival (S), sighting probabilities (p), and state transitions (ψ) estimated from the most parsimonious model (Sst pst ψst).
Figure 3Location of the Chiswell Island Steller sea lion rookery and remotely monitored haulouts in Kenai Fjords, Gulf of Alaska.
Figure 4Steller sea lion foraging trip durations at rookeries between the mid-1980s and 2000s.