Dear all,

My co-authors and I are pleased to bring to your attention the following
publication :

Sara Labrousse, Guy Williams, Takeshi Tamura, Sophie Bestley, Jean-Baptiste
Sallée, Alexander D. Fraser, Mike Sumner, Fabien Roquet, Karine Heerah,
Baptiste Picard, Christophe Guinet, Robert Harcourt, Clive McMahon, Mark A.
Hindell & Jean-Benoit Charrassin. *Coastal polynyas: Winter oases for
subadult southern elephant seals in East Antarctica*. *Sci. Rep. 8*, 3183;
doi:10.1038/s41598-018-21388-9 (2018).

Abstract
Antarctic coastal polynyas are regions of persistent open water and are
thought to be key bio-physical features within the sea-ice zone. However,
their use by the upper trophic levels of ecosystems remains unclear. A
unique bio-physical dataset recorded by southern elephant seals reveals
that East Antarctic polynyas are a key winter foraging habitat for male
seals. During their post-moult trips from Isles Kerguelen to the Antarctic
continental shelf, a total of 18 out of 23 seals visited 9 different
polynyas, spending on average 25 ± 20% (up to 75%) of their total trip time
inside polynyas. Changes in seal foraging and diving behaviours are
observed inside polynyas as compared to outside polynyas. Two polynya
usages by seals are observed for the inactive and active polynya phases,
pointing to different seasonal peaks in prey abundance. During the active
polynya phase, we link seal foraging behaviour to changes in the physical
stability of the water-column, which likely impact the seasonal biological
dynamics within polynyas.

A PDF may be obtained from http://rdcu.be/G7LM
<http://em.rdcu.be/wf/click?upn=KP7O1RED-2BlD0F9LDqGVeSGq10eNFcaloshUP9tmIG7g-3D_JYUAikv-2Fd-2BVPlD7R6zaqOnwZi-2FdvkGx6lEQkJocXmCHPEjdwZlcDT9UZhp7lt7WKKfCBL6mJPEwLfk2rSTkONId7tn3L4V6jQaKwVqrhnj1Vou1gaAKFXFVUkhBMXzyqCnmuyqOv7FDzVdRooXXKwzDLnwpiGDkCls-2Fse8eOfHEMDE5uZYfbJs6VzryYo381-2FKqOSgfJHhT-2FW956-2FkULUSbmpygFaw2FPpc87vr-2Fmboe16kcOXijfO6L6C32owq4dsyq-2Bs-2ByjoQuGTWs-2FiEFaQ-3D-3D>

Best regards,

-- 
Sara Labrousse, Dr.
Postdoctoral Scholar
Biology Department
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Office: +1 (508)-289-3579
email: [email protected]
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