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Fifty Years of Cook Inlet Beluga Whale Ecology Recorded as Isotopes in Bone and Teeth.

机译:库克湾白鲸鲸生态五十年,被记录为骨骼和牙齿中的同位素。

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摘要

Beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) are found across the Arctic and Subarctic in seasonally ice covered waters. Five stocks of beluga whales are associated with the waters near Alaska for at least part of the year and four of those five stocks are abundant and commonly hunted by Alaskan Natives. The belugas resident in Cook Inlet are also an important cultural and subsistence resource to Alaskan Natives in the area, but a ~50% decline in abundance in the 1990's led to the stock being designated as depleted under the Marine Mammal Protection Act in 2000 and listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act in 2008. Numerous studies of beluga whales in relation to stranding events, predation (killer whales), parasitism, disease, contaminants, and other potential population threats have not identified the reason for their inability to recover. Changes in diet have been considered, but are difficult to study because observations of feeding in muddy water and beluga stomachs are difficult to obtain. To investigate the past feeding ecology of beluga whales from Cook Inlet I sampled bone and teeth for isotopic analyses. I sampled bone from 20 individuals that died between 1964 and 2007 for stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analysis (values expressed as delta 13C and delta15N values). I also micro-sampled annual growth layer groups in the teeth of 26 individuals representing the years from 1962 to 2007. Bone and tooth data showed a general decrease in delta 13C and delta15N values over time. The delta 13C values from analyses of growth layer groups declined from -13.4‰ to -16.2‰ and delta15N values declined from 17.2‰ to 15.4‰. Although these values are consistent with a change in feeding ecology over time, the magnitude of the decrease in delta15N values (~2‰) is insufficient for a full trophic level shift (~3‰).The relatively large decrease in the delta13C values over the same time period (~3‰), however, is much greater than a full trophic level shift (~1‰) and suggests an increase in prey associated with freshwater, which typically have lower delta13C values than prey associated with marine water. To test this hypothesis I analyzed the strontium isotope composition (87Sr/86Sr ratios) of growth layer groups in teeth from a sub-set of individuals. The resulting 87Sr/86Sr ratios trended away from the global marine signature (0.70918) over time and toward the more freshwater signatures measured in rivers flowing into the upper reaches of Cook Inlet. These results indicate that the diet of Cook Inlet beluga whales has changed over time. This could be from feeding on different, more freshwater derived prey species, or from feeding on the same species, but on individuals from locations with a more freshwater influence. Both of these interpretations are consistent with population survey data indicating a retraction in beluga range into the upper reaches of Cook Inlet. This study presents the first evidence of a long term (~50 years) change in Cook Inlet beluga whale feeding ecology. The consequences of this change toward more freshwater-influenced prey, and how this change relates to Cook Inlet beluga whales' decline or recovery remains unknown. However, to better examine this change in feeding ecology a follow-up study will; 1) develop a strontium isoscape for the Cook Inlet watershed; 2) analyze more teeth to better analyze changes in feeding ecology by demographic group (sex, age); and 3) analyze growth layer groups from Bristol Bay beluga teeth for a comparison with Cook Inlet belugas to determine if the changes represent an ecosystem change within Cook Inlet or a broader scale change affecting another region. This study builds towards a better understanding of the changes in Cook Inlet beluga feeding ecology and will help to determine if changes in diet could be a factor in their recovery.
机译:在季节性冰覆盖的水域中,在北极和亚北极地区发现了白鲸(Delphinapterus leucas)。至少在一年的一部分时间内,五只白鲸种群与阿拉斯加附近的水域有关,而这五只种群中有四只种群丰富,通常被阿拉斯加土著人猎杀。库克湾(Cook Inlet)居民的白鲸也是该地区阿拉斯加原住民的重要文化和生活资源,但1990年代丰度下降了约50%,导致该种群根据2000年《海洋哺乳动物保护法》被指定为枯竭并上市。根据2008年《濒危物种法》的规定受到威胁。关于搁浅事件,捕食(虎鲸),寄生虫,疾病,污染物和其他潜在人口威胁的许多白鲸研究尚未确定其无法恢复的原因。已经考虑过改变饮食,但由于难以获得在浑水和白鲸胃中喂养的观察结果,因此难以研究。为了研究库克湾白鲸的过去觅食生态,我对骨骼和牙齿进行了采样以进行同位素分析。我从1964年至2007年之间死亡的20个个体的骨骼中取样,以进行稳定的碳和氮同位素分析(这些值分别表示为delta 13C和delta15N值)。我还对代表1962年至2007年的26个人的牙齿中的年生长层组进行了微采样。骨骼和牙齿数据显示,随着时间的推移,δ13C和δ15N值总体下降。生长层群分析得出的δ13C值从-13.4‰下降到-16.2‰,δ15N值从17.2‰下降到15.4‰。尽管这些值与饲料生态学随时间的变化一致,但deltro15N值的下降幅度(〜2‰)不足以进行完整的营养级移动(〜3‰)。delta13C值的下降幅度较大但是,同一时间段(〜3‰)远大于完整的营养级移动(〜1‰),这表明与淡水有关的猎物增加,而淡水通常具有比与海水有关的猎物低的δ13C值。为了检验该假设,我分析了来自一个子集的牙齿中生长层组的锶同位素组成(87Sr / 86Sr比)。随着时间的流逝,得出的87Sr / 86Sr比值逐渐偏离全球海洋特征(0.70918),而向流入库克湾上游的河流测得的淡水特征则更多。这些结果表明,库克湾白鲸的饮食随时间发生了变化。这可能来自以不同的,更多淡水来源的猎物为食,或以相同的物种为食,但来自具有更大淡水影响的地区的个体。这两种解释都与人口调查数据一致,表明白鲸的范围已缩回库克湾上游。这项研究提供了库克湾白鲸喂养生态长期(〜50年)变化的第一个证据。这种变化对更多受到淡水影响的猎物的后果,以及这种变化与库克湾白鲸的衰落或恢复之间的关系尚不清楚。但是,为了更好地研究这种喂养生态的变化,将进行后续研究; 1)为库克湾分水岭开发锶等值线; 2)分析更多的牙齿,以便更好地分析按人口统计学(性别,年龄)分类的喂养生态的变化; 3)分析布里斯托湾贝鲁加斯牙齿的生长层组,以与库克湾白鲸进行比较,以确定这些变化代表库克湾内的生态系统变化还是影响另一个地区的更广泛的尺度变化。这项研究旨在更好地了解库克湾白鲸饲养生态的变化,并将有助于确定饮食变化是否可能是其恢复的一个因素。

著录项

  • 作者

    Nelson, Mark Andrew.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Alaska Fairbanks.;

  • 授予单位 University of Alaska Fairbanks.;
  • 学科 Biology.;Paleoecology.;Ecology.
  • 学位 M.S.
  • 年度 2017
  • 页码 63 p.
  • 总页数 63
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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