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Breeding site choice fails to explain interannual associations of female grey seals.

Pomeroy, PP.; Redman, PR.; Ruddell, SJS.; Duck, CD.; Twiss, SD.

Authors

PP. Pomeroy

PR. Redman

SJS. Ruddell

CD. Duck



Abstract

Consistent, widespread fine-scale preferences for breeding sites may favour the emergence of intra-sexual associations and hence sociality. Pairwise association was defined for a terrestrially breeding phocid seal in which intraseasonal colony mixing is limited and mothers spend only 3 weeks ashore breeding. Interannual associations may occur between pairs of breeding female grey seals at North Rona, Scotland because of pupping site fidelity, 90% return rates and limited variability in parturition dates that individual mothers show. Associations can occur when mothers are found together irrespective of location, or because of joint preferences for locations. Mothers were sedentary and were unlikely to interact if they are separated by > 20 in. Using spatial and temporal association criteria, 160 of 176 of known mothers had intraseasonal associations with at least one other mother, with 14 of 126 (11.1%) of associations repeated in 2 years. The likelihood of female association in 2 years as a result of site fidelity, parturition date variation and pupping site quality was modelled. Interannual association between mothers that changed their pupping sites by up to the median observed pupping site fidelity (< 40 in) was indistinguishable from our model's predictions. However, the number of mothers that showed interannual association after displacements of > 40 in from their previous year's pupping sites was almost five times greater than the model predicted. We conclude that active association between adult female grey seals is not determined solely by habitat preference, and argue that examination of simple sociality in temporarily aggregating species can contribute significantly to socioecological models of social evolution.

Citation

Pomeroy, P., Redman, P., Ruddell, S., Duck, C., & Twiss, S. (2005). Breeding site choice fails to explain interannual associations of female grey seals. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 57(6), 546-556

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date 2005-04
Journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
Print ISSN 0340-5443
Electronic ISSN 1432-0762
Publisher Springer
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 57
Issue 6
Pages 546-556
Keywords interannual spatial association; intra-annual spatial association; pupping site fidelity; parturition date variability
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1596102
Publisher URL http://springerlink.metapress.com/content/qtb6krw29ghabcrp/