首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
2.
Morphometrics and growth of the critically endangered Saimaa ringed seal (Pusa hispida saimensis), which inhabits a freshwater lake in Finland were studied using data from 344 carcasses. This study presents the first detailed information on ringed seal pup growth and body condition from birth to the age of one year. Newborn pups were on average 68 cm long and weighed 5 kg. Pups attained the majority of their first year growth during the nursing period. Body condition and growth declined after weaning, but pups recovered from postweaning nutritional deprivation at the age of 8 mo. The seals achieved their maximum body length, girth, and mandible size around the age of 4 yr, and asymptotic body mass two years later. Baculum growth indicated that males reached sexual maturity at age 5–6 yr. The Saimaa ringed seals' asymptotic body length and mass were 132 cm and 59 kg, respectively, which is similar to medium sized marine ringed seals. Saimaa ringed seals' survival to adulthood is extremely low due to high bycatch mortality; furthermore climate change may hamper pup growth and elevate mortality. Therefore we recommend continuation of fishing closures to improve pup survival.  相似文献   

3.
The diet of ringed seals (Pusa hispida) from coastal and offshore areas of Northeast Greenland was determined by identifying, to the lowest taxonomic limit possible, all hard-part contents from the gastrointestinal tract of 51 seals sampled (2002–2004) in spring (April to June, N = 35) and autumn (September to October, N = 16). The autumn diet was characterized by high numbers of Parathemisto libellula, and the spring diet was comprised primarily of polar cod (Boreogadus saida), with few invertebrates consumed. The coastal seal diet samples had a diverse fish prey composition (during both the spring and autumn), whereas the open water seals had eaten mostly crustaceans with P. libellula being most abundant. The sample sizes from the various locations and seasons were not large enough to explore age-class effects on diet in addition. Similar to earlier studies, this study suggests that the ringed seal is a generalist that exploits prey based on availability, with a few key species dominating the diet in an area at least on a seasonal basis.  相似文献   

4.
The Saimaa ringed seal (Pusa hispida saimensis) is one of the few freshwater seal populations worldwide. The major conservation issue of this critically endangered population is bycatch mortality. We used digestive tract content and stable isotopes (δ13C and δ15N) to estimate the diet and seasonal feeding patterns for gaining better understanding of the seals feeding habits and potential conservation implications. The diet was similar across age groups. Altogether 15 fish species were identified and the most important were smelt (Osmerus eperlanus), ruff (Gymnocephalus cernuus), perch (Perca fluviatilis), vendace (Coregonus albula) and cyprinids. The high δ15N values suggested that the seals lose weight during winter and spring. Additionally the drop in δ15N values indicated that pups start to recover from postweaning stress and gain weight around the age of 6 mo. The isotope values differed regionally, which emphasizes that samples from consumers and prey should be collected from the same regions to improve interpretation of the stable isotopic results. Overall, diet composition suggests minimal to nonexistent competition with commercial or recreational fishing. However, observed weight loss of pups during summer may be related to higher risk of bycatch and this should be taken into account when planning temporal fishing closures.  相似文献   

5.
Eero Helle 《Ecography》1980,3(3):183-189
The censuses are based on six surveys (1590 km total) carried out between 13 April and 17 May 1975 and two surveys (560 km) on 13 and 15 May 1978. The material consists of 716 observations in 1975 and 214 observations in 1978, involving 1960 and 572 ringed seal specimens respectively. The transect width was determined in retrospect on the basis of the sighting angle and sighting distance, the latter being estimated and corrected by a factor typical for each separate flight. The mean sighting distances varied from 720 to 1140 m with a range from 160 to 2450 m. On average over 3000 ringed seats were basking on the ice of the Bothnian Bay in 1975 and 1978, promising at least 4000 specimens living in the area in total. Sources of methodological bias, factors affecting the observability of the seals, and the estimation of the total population based on the numbers of basking seals are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Haptoglobin (Hp) levels were measured in blood serum from 185 apparently healthy ringed seals (Pusa hispida) from Svalbard (age range, 1-30 yr) collected during the spring seasons of 2002 through 2004. The Hp concentration was 0.26 +/- 0.02 g/l (mean +/- SE; range, 0.0-1.5 g/l). Maturity status, body condition index (CI), interactions between CI and maturity status, and sex and maturity status all had significant influences on Hp levels. Mature males had significantly higher Hp concentrations compared with mature females (0.30 +/- 0.03 vs. 0.17 +/- 0.01 g/l, F(1,16) = 14.9, P<0.01). No differences were found between Hp levels in immature male and female seals (0.33 +/- 0.06 g/l). The Hp levels increased significantly in immature seals when the CI decreased. Despite the fact that mature males had a significantly lower CI than mature females, no direct correlation was found between Hp concentration and CI among adults. The elevated Hp values found in mature males might be related to injuries inflicted among males while fighting during the mating season or to high stress levels related to mating competition. The Hp concentrations of ringed seals measured in this study are useful baseline data for development of a diagnostic tool for future monitoring of the general health of this and other ringed seal populations.  相似文献   

8.
The stable isotope ratios (δ13C and δ15N) of three tissues with different metabolic rates (plasma, liver, and muscle) were used to investigate temporal variation in diet among nine individual Baltic ringed seals (Phoca hispida botnica Gmelin) from the Bothnian Bay, northeast Baltic Sea. The isotope values from plasma should reflect the most recent diet, values from liver the diet of the past weeks prior to sampling, and values from muscle should integrate diet over almost the entire breeding season of the ringed seals. In general, δ13C values of liver were more enriched in 13C than were those of either muscle or plasma, suggesting that the diet of the seals may have included a higher proportion of 13C‐enriched benthic prey in April. Females showed more variable δ13C values than males, suggesting possible gender differences in diet or in foraging locations. The differences that were apparent between females possibly reflect individual variation in the onset and duration of parturition and lactation, both of which likely restrict female foraging. Previous data from parasite infections and from alimentary tract contents of the same seals were linked to the isotope data to assist in drawing inferences about changes in the diets of individual seals.  相似文献   

9.
Odorous substances of rutting male ringed seals (Phoca hispida) were studied by extracting facial skin, which contains hypertrophied sebaceous and apocrine sweat glands, with methanol/hexane, and analysing the extracts with gas chromatography and combined gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. The extract contained high concentrations of a tertiary amine, three aminoalcohols, several organosulphur compounds, and two hydrocarbons. We suggest that the ringed seal males use scent to mark the breathing holes and subnivean lairs within their territories. Some of the lipids in the extract were not found in extracts from sexually immature males, and these lipids may be important as vehicles for scent deposition.  相似文献   

10.
Underwater vocalization and the functional structure of different vibrissae of the ringed seal ( Phoca hispida saimensis ) of Lake Saimaa, Eastern Finland, were studied. These seals live in darkness under the ice cover for several months during the year. It is known that blind seals are managing well in the lake. Visibility under water in some parts of the area where the seals live is only 2 m. It is suggested that echolocation is used in orientation and feeding. The Saimaa seal has click and click trial underwater vocalizations. However, both the frequency and intensity of the vocalization are low compared with, for example, those of dolphins. The structural adaptations for underwater sound localization are also not well developed.
The ringed seal has, however, extremely well-developed vibrissae. The innervation of one vibrissa is more than 10 times greater than normally found in mammals. The main structural deviations from normal mammalian vibrissae are: (1) an upper cavernous sinus, (2) a groove in the wall of the capsule at the level of the lower cavernous sinus, (3) elasticity of the connective tissue bands fixing the hair root to the capsule in the lower cavernous sinus and especially (4) the structure and innervation of the ring sinus area. Sensory elements are situated upon the glassy membrane on the surface of the outer rootsheath and in the basal cell layer of the outer rootsheath which is like a sensory epithelium. Below this epithelium a layer of liquid or gelatinous material and large amounts of glycogen are found. This sensory epithelium is especially well developed in the superciliary vibrissae. These vibrissae are protruded some millimetres when the seals are attentive. It is suggested that the vibrissae also sense sounds, which are transmitted to the sensory elements by tissue conduction through the capsule wall and via the blood sinuses. The seals may possibly detect compressional waves with the vibrissae.  相似文献   

11.
Seven post-moulting adult ringed seals (Phoca hispida) were equipped with Satellite Linked Dive Recorders in Svalbard in July 1996 to determine if ringed seals conduct long-distance post-moulting feeding excursions, and to obtain details of their diving behaviour. The mean duration of tags was 206 days (range 103–325). Two seals swam 400 km north to the drifting pack ice (82°N). The rest undertook more local movements. Forty-eight percent of all dives were shallower than 20 m and 90% were shallower than 100 m. Ninety-five percent of all dive durations were shorter than 10 min, and 99.5% were shorter than 15 min. This study has shown that adult ringed seals undertake varying patterns of post-moulting excursions. Accepted: 1 April 2000  相似文献   

12.
This study investigates the potential effects of moulting, and the concomitant period of fasting undertaken by ringed seals, on hormone, vitamin and contaminant status in adult animals in a population from Svalbard, Norway, which has relatively low contaminant levels. Concentrations of circulating total and free thyroxine and triiodothyronine, circulating and hepatic vitamin A, hepatic persistent organic pollutants and their circulating hydroxyl metabolites were higher in moulting seals compared to pre-moulting seals. The opposite trend was observed for body condition, circulating calcitriol levels and hepatic mRNA expression of thyroid hormone receptor β. No differences were observed for circulating or hepatic vitamin E levels or hepatic mRNA expressions for deioidinase 1 or 2, or retinoic acid receptor α between the two seal groups. The observed differences are likely the result of increased metabolic rates required during moulting to maintain thermal balance and replace the pelage, in combination with mobilization of lipid soluble compounds from blubber stores during the fasting period that is associated with moulting. The present study shows that contaminant levels and their relationships with physiological or endogenous variables can be highly confounded by moulting/fasting status. Thus, moulting status and body condition should be taken into consideration when using variables related to thyroid, calcium or vitamin A homeostasis as biomarkers for contaminant effects.  相似文献   

13.
The combined use of analysis of stable isotopes and archeozoological methods with respect to osteological material from an ancient Eskimo settlement (2370-810 yr BP) made it possible to reveal the main distinguishing features of ringed seal in the past. On the basis of the data obtained, we suppose that in the late Holocene in the Bering Strait, there were seals of two different ecotopes: those reproducing on fast ice and those on pack ice differing not only in habitats, but also in the proportion of various food items in the diet. The ringed seals caught by ancient Eskimos during their life had a mixed diet consisting of crustaceans and fish, but in most individuals, a shift towards fish eating was observed. No significant changes in the feeding related to individual age were recorded. The influence of feeding type on body size was shown: bigger, mature individuals occupied higher trophic positions.  相似文献   

14.
Food type or quality can influence assimilation efficiency (AE). AE (digestibility of dry matter) of two captive adult ringed seals (Phoca hispida; one male, one female) was estimated for five prey types. In trials, each of >8 days duration, the seals were fed redfish (Sebastes spp.), capelin (Mallotus villosus), Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida), Atlantic herring (Clupea harengus) and a mixture of herring and shrimp (Pandalus borealis). Prey were marked so that faecal samples could be matched to individual seals, and AE was estimated by the relative concentration of Mn2+ in food and faeces. AE was high but varied among the prey species (redfish 83%; capelin 87%; Arctic cod 88%; herring 94%; herring/Pandalus mixture 92%). There was a weak, positive relationship between AE and prey lipid content or energy density, but a negative relationship with inorganic content. AE was lower than expected for cape lin with high fat content. AE was not correlated with meal mass, number of fish in a meal, or seal mass. AE did not differ between the two seals. Received: 30 September 1996 / Accepted: 28 December 1996  相似文献   

15.
Arctic ecosystem dynamics are shifting in response to warming temperatures and sea ice loss. Such ecosystems may be monitored by examining the diet of upper trophic level species, which varies with prey availability. To assess interannual variation in the Beaufort Sea ecosystem, we examined spatial and temporal trends in ringed seal (Pusa hispida) δ13C and δ15N in claw growth layers grown from 1964 to 2011. Stable isotopes were correlated with climate indices, environmental conditions, seal population productivity, and geographic location. Sex and age did not influence stable isotopes. Enriched 13C was linked to cyclonic circulation regimes, seal productivity, and westward sampling locations. Higher δ15N was linked to lower sea surface temperatures, a higher percentage of pups in the subsistence harvest, and sample locations that were eastward and further from shore. From the 1960s to 2000s, ringed seal niche width expanded, suggesting a diversification of diet due to expansion of prey and/or seal space use. Overall, trends in ringed seal stable isotopes indicate changes within the Beaufort Sea ecosystem affected by water temperatures and circulation regimes. We suggest that continued monitoring of upper trophic level species will yield insights into changing ecosystem structure with climate change.  相似文献   

16.
Arctic marine mammals may be subject to human-induced disturbance from various air traffic, mostly in connection with exploration and exploitation of non-renewable resources. The escape responses (i.e. leaving the ice) of hauled out ringed seals (Phoca hispida) to a low-flying (150 m) fixed-wing twin-engine aircraft (Partenavia PN68 Observer) during strip censuses in eastern Greenland (June 1984) and to a low-flying (150 m) helicopter (Bell 206 III) during reconnaissance in northwestern Greenland (May 1992) were recorded. Overall, 6.0% of the seals (N tot = 5040) escaped as a reaction to the fixed-wing aircraft. Seals escaped less than about 600 m in front of the aircraft. The overall probability of escaping was 0.21 within a 200-m-wide centre zone, 0.06 on the side of the aircraft (100–300 m from the flight track), and 0.02 between 300 and 500 m from the track. The probability of escaping was found to be influenced by the time of day, relative wind direction and wind chill. Overall, about 49% of all seals (N tot = 227 cases) escaped as a response to the helicopter. Seals entered the water a maximum of about 1250 m in front of the aircraft. At wind chill values below 1100 kcal/m2 h, the probability of escaping was 0.79 in the 200-m-wide centre zone. On the sides the probability of escaping decreased up to about 500 m from the flight track whereafter it remained constant at about 0.30 up to about 1450 m. During the helicopter surveys wind chill was the only environmental factor found to have an additional effect on the probability of escaping. The study indicated that the risk of scaring ringed seals into the water can be substantially reduced if small-type helicopters do not approach them closer than about 1500 m, and small fixed-winged aircraft not closer than about 500 m. Accepted: 27 August 1998  相似文献   

17.
We monitored movements and haul-out patterns of four ringed seals Phoca hispida , off Northwest Greenland between 5 June and 31 October 1988 using the Argos Data Collection and Location System When the seals were hauled out on fast ice their locations were accurately determined, but when they were at sea, few accurate locations were obtained, evidently because these seals spent little time at the surface between dives The seals remained within the fjord where they were tagged, and hauled out often to early July Thereafter, as fast-ice disappeared, they dispersed widely and spent less time hauled out Time of day had no significant effect on haul-out patterns Haul-out periods declined significantly from June to August and increased in September-October Satellite contact with one seal was lost after 16 d while the seal was still in the fjord in late June One seal travelled over 200 km southwest and was located 4 July in offshore waters of Smith Sound 30 d after instrumentation Another seal moved southeast along the Greenland coast where contact was lost after 49 d on 23 July The fourth seal moved north along the Greenland coast, hauled out regularly on ice, and returned south along the coast in late September and October after 181 d of contact with the satellite  相似文献   

18.
19.
Although single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have become the marker of choice in the field of human genetics, these markers are only slowly emerging in ecological, evolutionary and conservation genetic analyses of nonmodel species. This is partly because of difficulties associated with the discovery and characterization of SNP markers. Herein, we adopted a simple straightforward approach to identifying SNPs, based on screening of a random genomic library. In total, we identified 768 SNPs in the ringed seal, Pusa hispida hispida, in samples from Greenland and Svalbard. Using three seal samples, SNPs were discovered at a rate of one SNP per 402 bp, whereas re-sequencing of 96 seals increased the density to one SNP per 29 bp. Although applicable to any species of interest, the approach is especially well suited for SNP discovery in nonmodel organisms and is easily implemented in any standard genetics laboratory, circumventing the need for prior genomic data and use of next-generation sequencing facilities.  相似文献   

20.
Summary The medullary pyramid of renculi in kidneys of ringed seals (Phoca hispida) is enclosed by a basket composed of ribbons of stromal tissue continuous with the wall of the calyx. Branched smooth muscle cells with well-developed Golgi complexes and rough endoplasmic reticulum and only an incomplete external lamina are the principal cells in sites near the origin of the ribbons from the calycal wall. Deeper in the corticomedullary junctional region, smooth muscle is progressively replaced with stellate or spindle-shaped cells exhibiting structural characteristics intermediate between those of fibroblasts and smooth muscle fibers. These myofibroblast-like cells contain arrays of parallel microfilaments 6–8 nm thick with associated focal densities and subplasmalemmal dense plaques, caveolae, elongate, often deeply wrinkled nuclei, and well-developed Golgi complexes and rough endoplasmic reticulum. Material resembling external lamina is associated with parts of the surfaces of most myofibroblast-like cells and intermediate junctions are present. Fibroblasts lacking arrays of parallel microfilaments are a minority at any level in the stromal ribbons. Interstitial cells in the vicinity of the corticomedullary junction show similar myofibroblast-like characteristics. The smooth muscle and myofibroblast-like cells presumably assist expression of urine from the papilla and calyx, and possibly participate as pacemakers for the urinary tract.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号