Top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals

Historic hunting has led to severe reductions of many marine mammal species across the globe. After hunting ceased, some populations have recovered to pre-exploitation levels and may have regained their prominent position as top predator in marine ecosystems. Also, the harbor seal population in the international Wadden Sea grew at an exponential rate following a ban on seal hunting in 1960s, and the current number ~38,000 is close to the historic population size. Here we estimate the impact of the harbor seal predation on the fish community in the Wadden Sea and nearby coastal waters. Fish remains in fecal samples and published estimates on the seal’s daily energy requirement were used to estimate prey selection and the magnitude of seal consumption. Estimates on prey abundance were derived from demersal fish surveys, and fish growth was estimated using a Dynamic Energy Budget model. GPS tracking provided information on where seals most likely caught their prey. Harbor seals hauling-out in the Dutch Wadden Sea fed predominantly on demersal fish, for example, flatfish species (flounder, sole, plaice, dab), but also on sandeel, cod, and whiting. Although harbor seals acquire the majority of prey further offshore in the adjacent North Sea, and only spend 14% of their diving time in the Wadden Sea, seal predation was still estimated to cause an average annual mortality of 43% of the remaining fish in the Wadden Sea and 60% in the nearby shallow coastal waters (<20 m). There were however large sources of uncertainty in the estimated impact of seals on fish, including the migration of fish between the North Sea and Wadden Sea, and catchability estimates of the fish survey sampling gear, particularly for sandeel and other pelagic fish species. Our estimate suggested a considerable top-down pressure by harbor seals on demersal fish. However, predation by seals may also alleviate density-dependent competition between the remaining fish, allowing for increased fish growth, and partly compensating for the reduction in fish numbers. This study shows that recovering coastal marine mammal populations could become an important component in the functioning of shallow coastal ecosystems.

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Main Authors: Aarts, Geert, Brasseur, Sophie, Poos, Jan Jaap, Schop, Jessica, Kirkwood, Roger, Van Kooten, Tobias, Mul, Evert, Reijnders, Peter, Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D., Tulp, Ingrid
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Phoca vitulina, Subtidal, demersal fish, diet, harbor seal, impact, intertidaL, predation pressure, sealing, top predator, top-down regulation,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/top-down-pressure-on-a-coastal-ecosystem-by-harbor-seals
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5455692024-12-04 Aarts, Geert Brasseur, Sophie Poos, Jan Jaap Schop, Jessica Kirkwood, Roger Van Kooten, Tobias Mul, Evert Reijnders, Peter Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D. Tulp, Ingrid Article/Letter to editor Ecosphere 10 (2019) 1 ISSN: 2150-8925 Top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals 2019 Historic hunting has led to severe reductions of many marine mammal species across the globe. After hunting ceased, some populations have recovered to pre-exploitation levels and may have regained their prominent position as top predator in marine ecosystems. Also, the harbor seal population in the international Wadden Sea grew at an exponential rate following a ban on seal hunting in 1960s, and the current number ~38,000 is close to the historic population size. Here we estimate the impact of the harbor seal predation on the fish community in the Wadden Sea and nearby coastal waters. Fish remains in fecal samples and published estimates on the seal’s daily energy requirement were used to estimate prey selection and the magnitude of seal consumption. Estimates on prey abundance were derived from demersal fish surveys, and fish growth was estimated using a Dynamic Energy Budget model. GPS tracking provided information on where seals most likely caught their prey. Harbor seals hauling-out in the Dutch Wadden Sea fed predominantly on demersal fish, for example, flatfish species (flounder, sole, plaice, dab), but also on sandeel, cod, and whiting. Although harbor seals acquire the majority of prey further offshore in the adjacent North Sea, and only spend 14% of their diving time in the Wadden Sea, seal predation was still estimated to cause an average annual mortality of 43% of the remaining fish in the Wadden Sea and 60% in the nearby shallow coastal waters (<20 m). There were however large sources of uncertainty in the estimated impact of seals on fish, including the migration of fish between the North Sea and Wadden Sea, and catchability estimates of the fish survey sampling gear, particularly for sandeel and other pelagic fish species. Our estimate suggested a considerable top-down pressure by harbor seals on demersal fish. However, predation by seals may also alleviate density-dependent competition between the remaining fish, allowing for increased fish growth, and partly compensating for the reduction in fish numbers. This study shows that recovering coastal marine mammal populations could become an important component in the functioning of shallow coastal ecosystems. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/top-down-pressure-on-a-coastal-ecosystem-by-harbor-seals 10.1002/ecs2.2538 https://edepot.wur.nl/468171 Phoca vitulina Subtidal demersal fish diet harbor seal impact intertidaL predation pressure sealing top predator top-down regulation https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Phoca vitulina
Subtidal
demersal fish
diet
harbor seal
impact
intertidaL
predation pressure
sealing
top predator
top-down regulation
Phoca vitulina
Subtidal
demersal fish
diet
harbor seal
impact
intertidaL
predation pressure
sealing
top predator
top-down regulation
spellingShingle Phoca vitulina
Subtidal
demersal fish
diet
harbor seal
impact
intertidaL
predation pressure
sealing
top predator
top-down regulation
Phoca vitulina
Subtidal
demersal fish
diet
harbor seal
impact
intertidaL
predation pressure
sealing
top predator
top-down regulation
Aarts, Geert
Brasseur, Sophie
Poos, Jan Jaap
Schop, Jessica
Kirkwood, Roger
Van Kooten, Tobias
Mul, Evert
Reijnders, Peter
Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D.
Tulp, Ingrid
Top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals
description Historic hunting has led to severe reductions of many marine mammal species across the globe. After hunting ceased, some populations have recovered to pre-exploitation levels and may have regained their prominent position as top predator in marine ecosystems. Also, the harbor seal population in the international Wadden Sea grew at an exponential rate following a ban on seal hunting in 1960s, and the current number ~38,000 is close to the historic population size. Here we estimate the impact of the harbor seal predation on the fish community in the Wadden Sea and nearby coastal waters. Fish remains in fecal samples and published estimates on the seal’s daily energy requirement were used to estimate prey selection and the magnitude of seal consumption. Estimates on prey abundance were derived from demersal fish surveys, and fish growth was estimated using a Dynamic Energy Budget model. GPS tracking provided information on where seals most likely caught their prey. Harbor seals hauling-out in the Dutch Wadden Sea fed predominantly on demersal fish, for example, flatfish species (flounder, sole, plaice, dab), but also on sandeel, cod, and whiting. Although harbor seals acquire the majority of prey further offshore in the adjacent North Sea, and only spend 14% of their diving time in the Wadden Sea, seal predation was still estimated to cause an average annual mortality of 43% of the remaining fish in the Wadden Sea and 60% in the nearby shallow coastal waters (<20 m). There were however large sources of uncertainty in the estimated impact of seals on fish, including the migration of fish between the North Sea and Wadden Sea, and catchability estimates of the fish survey sampling gear, particularly for sandeel and other pelagic fish species. Our estimate suggested a considerable top-down pressure by harbor seals on demersal fish. However, predation by seals may also alleviate density-dependent competition between the remaining fish, allowing for increased fish growth, and partly compensating for the reduction in fish numbers. This study shows that recovering coastal marine mammal populations could become an important component in the functioning of shallow coastal ecosystems.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Phoca vitulina
Subtidal
demersal fish
diet
harbor seal
impact
intertidaL
predation pressure
sealing
top predator
top-down regulation
author Aarts, Geert
Brasseur, Sophie
Poos, Jan Jaap
Schop, Jessica
Kirkwood, Roger
Van Kooten, Tobias
Mul, Evert
Reijnders, Peter
Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D.
Tulp, Ingrid
author_facet Aarts, Geert
Brasseur, Sophie
Poos, Jan Jaap
Schop, Jessica
Kirkwood, Roger
Van Kooten, Tobias
Mul, Evert
Reijnders, Peter
Rijnsdorp, Adriaan D.
Tulp, Ingrid
author_sort Aarts, Geert
title Top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals
title_short Top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals
title_full Top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals
title_fullStr Top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals
title_full_unstemmed Top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals
title_sort top-down pressure on a coastal ecosystem by harbor seals
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/top-down-pressure-on-a-coastal-ecosystem-by-harbor-seals
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