Insights from the first global population estimate of Weddell seals in Antarctica
Science Advances, ISSN: 2375-2548, Vol: 7, Issue: 39, Page: eabh3674
2021
- 31Citations
- 62Captures
- 9Mentions
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Metrics Details
- Citations31
- Citation Indexes30
- 30
- CrossRef22
- Policy Citations1
- Policy Citation1
- Captures62
- Readers62
- 62
- Mentions9
- News Mentions6
- News6
- References2
- Wikipedia2
- Blog Mentions1
- Blog1
Most Recent Blog
Weddell Seal Population May Be Much Lower Than Previously Thought
High-resolution satellite images allowed researchers to do a more comprehensive head count than ever before, and revealed patterns in the seals’ distribution.
Most Recent News
Antarctic researchers gain insights from on high as they count seals from space
Scientists used satellite images and more than 300,000 volunteers to count Weddell seals, a key Southern Ocean indicator species Researchers believe they have accurately estimated Antarctica’s Weddell seal population for the first time – using images from space and the eyes of hundreds of thousands of citizen scientists. Weddell seals are a key indicator species in the Southern Ocean, for both sea
Article Description
The Weddell seal is one of the best-studied marine mammals in the world, owing to a multidecadal demographic effort in the southernmost part of its range. Despite their occurrence around the Antarctic coastline, we know little about larger scale patterns in distribution, population size, or structure. We combined high-resolution satellite imagery from 2011, crowd-sourcing, and habitat modeling to report the first global population estimate for the species and environmental factors that influence its distribution. We estimated ~202,000 (95% confidence interval: 85,345 to 523,140) sub-adult and adult female seals, with proximate ocean depth and fast-ice variables as factors explaining spatial prevalence. Distances to penguin colonies were associated with seal presence, but only emperor penguin population size had a strong negative relationship. The small, estimated population size relative to previous estimates and the seals' nexus with trophic competitors indicates that a community ecology approach is required in efforts to monitor the Southern Ocean ecosystem.
Bibliographic Details
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
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