1. Body and blubber relationships in antarctic pack ice seals: implications for blubber depth patterns.
- Author
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Castellini MA, Trumble SJ, Mau TL, Yochem PK, Stewart BS, and Koski MA
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Animals, Antarctic Regions, Body Weights and Measures, Seals, Earless physiology, Species Specificity, Adipose Tissue anatomy & histology, Body Composition physiology, Seals, Earless anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Morphometrics and blubber depths from all four high Antarctic seals (Weddell, Ross, crabeater, and leopard) were obtained during a midsummer research cruise in the Ross Sea as the physiological ecology component of the U.S. Antarctic Pack Ice Seals project. These data are the only in vivo measurements of all four species from the same location and time of year and focused on variances in morphometrics and blubber depth related to species, sex, and age. By controlling for location and season, this cross-species design provided the means to differentiate how blubber mass might be influenced in these groups. We measured both absolute blubber depth and ratio of blubber depth to body core diameter. We found that adult and younger animals showed differences in blubber depth, but male versus female seals did not show differences within any given species. However, when compared across species, the ratio of blubber ring depth to body core diameter suggests that adult Weddell seals differ in their use of blubber compared with the other three species. We propose that this difference in blubber pattern is most likely related to Weddell nutritional requirements during the breeding season having a greater influence on blubber depth than thermal requirements when compared with the other three species.
- Published
- 2009
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