Dear all,

My co-authors and I are happy to present our new paper titelt:
Individuality counts: A new comprehensive approach to foraging strategies of a 
tropical marine predator

The PDF is available open-access on Researchgate or direct from Oecologia:

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/348735245_Individuality_counts_A_new_comprehensive_approach_to_foraging_strategies_of_a_tropical_marine_predator
 
<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/348735245_Individuality_counts_A_new_comprehensive_approach_to_foraging_strategies_of_a_tropical_marine_predator>
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00442-021-04850-w 
<https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00442-021-04850-w>

Abstract
Foraging strategies are of great ecological interest, as they have a strong 
impact on the fitness of an individual and can affect its ability to cope with 
a changing environment. Recent studies on foraging strategies show a higher 
complexity than previously thought due to intraspecific variability. To 
reliably identify foraging strategies and describe the different foraging 
niches they allow individual animals to realize, high-resolution multivariate 
approaches which consider individual variation are required. Here we dive into 
the foraging strategies of Galápagos sea lions (Zalophus wollebaeki), a 
tropical predator confronted with substantial annual variation in sea surface 
temperature. This affects prey abundance, and El Niño events, expected to 
become more frequent and severe with climate change, are known to have dramatic 
effects on sea lions. This study used high-resolution measures of depth, GPS 
position and acceleration collected from 39 lactating sea lion females to 
analyze their foraging strategies at an unprecedented level of detail using a 
novel combination of automated broken stick algorithm, hierarchical cluster 
analysis and individually fitted multivariate hidden Markov models. We found 
three distinct foraging strategies (pelagic, benthic, and night divers), which 
differed in their horizontal, vertical and temporal distribution, most likely 
corresponding to different prey species, and allowed us to formulate hypotheses 
with regard to adaptive values under different environmental scenarios. We 
demonstrate the advantages of our multivariate approach and inclusion of 
individual variation to reliably gain a deeper understanding of the adaptive 
value and ecological relevance of foraging strategies of marine predators in 
dynamic environments.

Please do not hesitate to contact me with questions at 
jonas.fl.schw...@gmail.com <mailto:jonas.fl.schw...@gmail.com>

Best regards,
__

Jonas Schwarz
PhD Student
Galapagos Sea Lion Project
Department of Animal Behaviour
Bielefeld University

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