Dear MARMAM community,
My co-authors and I would like to share our recently published paper:


Haro, D., Labra, F. A., Neira, S., Hernández-Padilla, J. C., &
Arreguín-Sánchez, F. (2025). Ecological role of marine mammals in the
Magellan Strait: Insights from trophic modeling. *Ecological Modelling*,
*501*, 110944.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2024.110944

Abstract

Predators, such as marine mammals, impact the structure and functioning of
marine communities. Due to their energy requirements, the wide variety of
prey and the diversity of ecological niches they occupy, these
organisms exert effects on diverse ecosystems. To evaluate the ecological
role and trophic impact of the marine mammals in the Magellan Strait,
Chile, we built a food web model using the Ecopath software. In this
system, marine mammals occupied the third and fourth trophic levels and fed
on prey from 20 functional groups, from zooplankton (i.e., sei whales,
dolphins) to sea lions and seabirds (i.e., killer whales). Killer whales
played the ecological role of key species in this ecosystem, potentially
controlling the biomass of large predators and explaining 100 % of their
mortality caused by predation. This potential control favored a biomass
increase of fish such as salmon (52 % of their biomass), silverside (45 %)
and Patagonian robalo (42 %). South American sea lions had a high trophic
impact on the ecosystem groups’ biomass, being a significant predator of
salmon (76 % mortality). The results support the hypothesis that humpback
whales are the main consumer of Fuegian sprats and squat lobsters, with 43
% and 40.7 % of the total prey consumption, respectively. Trophic
generality significantly and directly correlated with the trophic level of
consumers (t = 5.92; r = 0.78, p < 0.001), demonstrating that high trophic
level organisms feed on a greater prey diversity. Trophic vulnerability
and trophic level presented a significant inverse correlation (s = 3883.2;
ρ = -0.69; p < 0.001), indicating that functional groups at higher trophic
levels had either few or no predators in the Magellan Strait ecosystem.
The results do not allow us to conclude that higher trophic-level organisms
have a greater impact on the food web. We suggest that the trophic impact
is related to multiple factors like predator biomass, feeding habits and
prey biomass consumption in a particular system. This study is the first
model to evaluate the ecological role of marine mammals in the food web of
the Magellan Strait, Chile.


Cheers,

-- 
*Daniela Haro Díaz*
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