Dear Colleagues,


we are pleased to announce a new publication in the journal Fishery Bulletin:

Horning M, Mellish JE. 2014. In cold blood: evidence of Pacific sleeper shark 
(Somniosus pacificus) predation on Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) in 
the Gulf of Alaska. Fishery Bulletin 112:297-310.
doi:10.7755/FB.112.4.6



This publication is available for open download and distribution via Fishery 
Bulletin:
http://fishbull.noaa.gov/1124/horning.pdf



Abstract—Temperature data received post mortem in 2008–13 from 15 of 36 
juvenile Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) that had been surgically 
implanted in 2005–11 with dual life history transmitters (LHX tags) indicated 
that all 15 animals died by predation. In 3 of those 15 cases, at least 1 of 
the 2 LHX tags was ingested by a cold-blooded predator, and those tags 
recorded, immediately after the sea lion’s death, temperatures that 
corresponded to deepwater values. These tags were regurgitated or passed 5–11 
days later by predators. Once they sensed light and air, the tags commenced 
transmissions as they floated at the ocean surface, reporting temperatures that 
corresponded to regional sea-surface estimates. The circumstances related to 
the tag in a fourth case were ambiguous. In the remaining 11 cases, tags sensed 
light and air immediately after the sea lion’s death and reported temperatures 
that corresponded to estimates of regional sea-surface temperatures. In these 
11 cases, circumstances did not allow for inferences on the species of 
predator. Among reported poikilotherm predators of Steller sea lions, only the 
Pacific sleeper shark (Somniosus pacificus) is known to have body core 
temperatures that are near ambient. The data from this study indicate that 
Pacific sleeper sharks need to be considered as a possible source of mortality 
of juvenile Steller sea lions in the region of the Gulf of Alaska.





Best Regards,

Markus Horning



__________________________________________________
Dr. Markus Horning, Pinniped Ecology Applied Research Lab
Marine Mammal Institute, Oregon State University
2030 SE Marine Science Drive, Newport, OR 97365, USA
Tel. 541.867.0202  Fax 541.867.0128
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
http://mmi.oregonstate.edu/pearl/
www.sealtag.org<http://www.sealtag.org/>


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