Dear MARMAMMers,

My colleagues and I are pleased to announce our latest publication in
Global Change Biology:

Wege, M., Salas, L., LaRue, M. (2021) Ice matters: Life‐history strategies
of two Antarctic seals dictate climate change eventualities in the Weddell
Sea. Global Change Biology.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/gcb.15828

*Abstract:*
The impacts of climate change in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean are not
uni- form and ice- obligate species with dissimilar life- history
characteristics will likely re- spond differently to their changing
ecosystems. We use a unique data set of Weddell *Leptonychotes weddellii *and
crabeater seals' (CESs) *Lobodon carcinophaga* breeding season distribution
in the Weddell Sea, determined from satellite imagery. We con- trast the
theoretical climate impacts on both ice- obligate predators who differ in
life- history characteristics: CESs are highly specialized Antarctic krill*
Euphausia superba* predators and breed in the seasonal pack ice; Weddell
seals (WESs) are generalist predators and breed on comparatively stable
fast ice. We used presence– absence data and a suite of remotely sensed
environmental variables to build habitat models. Each of the environmental
predictors is multiplied by a ‘climate change score’ based on known
responses to climate change to create a ‘change importance product’.
Results show CESs are more sensitive to climate change than WESs. Crabeater
seals prefer to breed close to krill, and the compounding effects of
changing sea ice concentra- tions and sea surface temperatures, the
proximity to krill and abundance of stable breeding ice, can influence
their post- breeding foraging success and ultimately their future breeding
success. But in contrast to the Ross Sea, here WESs prefer to breed closer
to larger colonies of emperor penguins (*Aptenodytes forsteri*). This
suggests that the Weddell Sea may currently be prey- abundant, allowing the
only two air- breathing Antarctic silverfish predators (*Pleuragramma
antarctica*) (WESs and emperor penguins) to breed closer to each other.
This is the first basin- scale, region- specific comparison of breeding
season habitat in these two key Antarctic predators based on real- world
data to compare climate change responses. This work shows that broad-
brush, basin- scale approaches to understanding species- specific responses
to climate change are not always appropriate, and regional models are
needed— especially when designing marine protected areas.

All the best,
Mia


-- 
Mia Wege, PhD

Claude Leon Postdoctoral Fellow
Marion Island Marine Mammal Programme
Department of Zoology & Entomology
University of Pretoria

+27 (0)78 002 3951
[email protected]
www.drmiawege.com
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