Dear MARMAM subscribers,


My colleagues and I are pleased to announce the publication of our research
article:

Ouled-Cheikh, J., March, D., Borras-Chavez, R., Drago, M., Goebel, M. E.,
Fariña, J. M., Gazo, M., Coll, M., & Cardona, L. (2024). Future
climate-induced distribution shifts in a sexually dimorphic key predator of
the Southern Ocean. Global Change Biology, 30(3), e17191.
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.17191

Abstract;


The response to climate change in highly dimorphic species can be hindered
by differences between sexes in habitat preferences and movement patterns.
The Antarctic fur seal, *Arctocephalus gazella*, is the most abundant
pinniped in the Southern Hemisphere, and one of the main consumers of
Antarctic krill, *Euphausia superba*, in the Southern Ocean. However, the
populations breeding in the Atlantic Southern Ocean are decreasing, partly
due to global warming. Male and female Antarctic fur seals differ greatly
in body size and foraging ecology, and little is known about their
sex-specific responses to climate change. We used satellite tracking data
and Earth System Models to predict changes in habitat suitability for male
and female Antarctic fur seals from the Western Antarctic Peninsula under
different climate change scenarios. Under the most extreme scenario
(SSP5-8.5; global average temperature +4.4°C projected by 2100), suitable
habitat patches will shift southward during the non-breeding season,
leading to a minor overall habitat loss. The impact will be more pronounced
for females than for males. The reduction of winter foraging grounds might
decrease the survival of post-weaned females, reducing recruitment and
jeopardizing population viability. During the breeding season, when males
fast on land, suitable foraging grounds for females off the South Shetland
Islands will remain largely unmodified, and new ones will emerge in the
Bellingshausen Sea. As Antarctic fur seals are income breeders, the
foraging grounds of females should be reasonably close to the breeding
colony. As a result, the new suitable foraging grounds will be useful for
females only if nearby beaches currently covered by sea ice emerge by the
end of the century. Furthermore, the colonization of these new, ice-free
breeding locations might be limited by strong female philopatry. These
results should be considered when managing the fisheries of Antarctic krill
in the Southern Ocean.

The article is available from the publisher's website (
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.17191) or by request at [email protected]


Best regards,


Jazel Ouled-Cheikh
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