Resumen
An increasing number of North Atlantic killer whales Orcinus orca have recently been observed in sub-Arctic and Arctic seas. Within these regions, marine mammal consumption appears frequent relative to the more fish-based diet within traditional habitats. To provide insight into feeding habits of Northward range-expanding killer whales, full-depth blubber fatty acid signatures from 21 free-ranging killer whales from Southeast Greenland, Faroe Islands, and Denmark were compared to those of 4 managed-care killer whales, which were fed a constant, long-term fish diet. We analyzed the entire blubber layer in 10 equal-length subsections to evaluate how fatty acid stratification throughout blubber depth May influence fatty acid-based feeding evaluations. Specific fatty acid markers previously linked to marine mammal feeding in other killer whale populations were significantly higher in free-ranging killer whales relative to managed-care individuals, suggesting that marine mammals represent a time-integrated component of free-ranging killer whales’ diet. Unlike the managed-care whales, fatty acid signatures were highly variable among the free-ranging killer whales, suggesting that either they are generalists or exhibit inter-individual feeding variation. All samples, regardless of origin, showed stratification of fatty acid signatures through blubber layers. Dietary fatty acids generally occurred in higher proportions and were more variable in the innermost layers for the free-ranging whales. These data suggest that superficial blubber sampling through biopsy darting May not capture fine-scale and/or short-term variation in diet, and therefore the sampling approach should be carefully considered in research using fatty acids to evaluate feeding ecology of killer whales and other cetaceans.
Idioma original | English |
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Páginas (desde-hasta) | 1-12 |
Número de páginas | 12 |
Publicación | Marine Ecology - Progress Series |
Volumen | 603 |
DOI | |
Estado | Published - sep. 17 2018 |
Nota bibliográfica
Funding Information:Acknowledgements. Thanks to local hunters for assistance in the free-ranging killer whale sample collection, as well as J. Weisser, M. Levin, and B. M. Jenssen for participating in the sampling. D. Bloch, E. Stefansson, L. Jensen, and B. Mikkelsen provided blubber samples and biological details of the stranded killer whales from the Faroe Islands and Denmark. Thanks to SeaWorld staff for assistance with the managed-care samples. Thanks to A. Provatas and G. Ula-towski for allowing us to use instruments in their labs and to J. August, C. Boba, and K. Tom for assisting in the analysis. Thanks to R. Pugh and J. Kucklick (NIST) for providing the SRM1945. This research was supported by a 2017 Summer Grant from the Center of Biological Risk at the University of Connecticut, the SeaWorld & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund, as well as from the University of Connecticut Scholarship Facilitation Fund, and start-up funds (M.A.M.). Additional funds for sample collection in Greenland came from The Danish Cooperation for Environment in the Arctic (DANCEA) Programme (R.D., C.S.), The Carlsberg Foundation, and the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (M.H., grant agreement PIOF-GA-2012-329996).
Publisher Copyright:
© Dietz, Sonne, St. Leger, Rosing-Asvid, Hansen, and outside the USA The US Government 2018.
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
- Aquatic Science
- Ecology