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National Marine Fisheries Service, Alaska Regional Office

Southeast alaska landscape, photo: Mandy Lindeberg

NOAA Fisheries News Releases


NEWS RELEASE
October 11, 2005
Sheela McLean
(907) 586-7032

First Satellite Tags Placed on Ribbon Seals

NOAA Fisheries researchers traveled to Russia this summer and successfully attached satellite-linked dive recorders to ribbon seals, Histriophoca fasciata, for the first time. The recorders are collecting information on the seals' individual locations and on the timing and depths of their dives.

"We are analyzing the data to learn about the seasonal migrations, foraging behavior, and haul-out locations of ribbon seals ," said Dr. Michael Cameron, a wildlife biologist in the Polar Ecosystems Program at the Alaska Fisheries Science Center's National Marine Mammal Laboratory. "We are taking some of the initial steps towards developing the basic understanding required for the assessment and management of this poorly-understood species."

Adult female ribbon seal
An adult female ribbon seal is released on the ice floe where she was captured.

Dr. Cameron explained that the Russian site was particularly favorable for capture and tagging studies because ribbon seals are found there in high densities within range of small Russian charter boats.

Researchers captured ten seals in hoop nets on ice floes along the eastern coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula and glued recorders to their backs. The recorders, which transmit information to a satellite when the seals are at the surface or hauled out, are expected to remain glued to the two adult males, three adult females, and five pups for about 11 months. Researchers at the Alaska Fisheries Science Center receive the data from a satellite data-processing service called Argos, and archive them for analysis.

"Ribbon seals are likely to be a key ecological component of arctic marine ecosystems, and they are one of four species of true seals that are subsistence resources for Alaska Native coastal communities in the Arctic." said Dr. Cameron. "The densities of ice-dwelling seals, along with walrus, are highly sensitive to suitable sea ice conditions, and therefore these species may be particularly vulnerable to climatic change."

photo: researcher checks a satellite transmitter before releasing an adult female ribbon seal
Brent Stewart, a researcher from Hubbs SeaWorld Research Institute, checks the glue on a satellite transmitter before releasing the instrumented adult female ribbon seal

Some researchers have speculated that most ribbon seals remain in the open ocean of the Bering Sea in the summer. Data from this study so far supports the theory that these seals remain primarily in the ice-free areas south of the Bering Strait during summer. Most seals dispersed southeastward from the Kamchatka area after they were tagged, with some adults traveling into the North Pacific and foraging south of the central Aleutian Islands.

Most of the seals' dives were less than 150 meters deep (perhaps to the sea floor) when the seals were over the continental shelf, but the dives deepened as the seals moved offshore.

Dr. Cameron said that the study has already demonstrated the feasibility of future studies on ribbon seals in the remote marginal ice zones of the central Bering Sea, an area that could be accessed by the new NOAA research vessel Oscar Dyson, which is homeported in Kodiak, Alaska.

For more information on ribbon and other ice seals, visit the Alaska Fisheries Science Center website at www.afsc.noaa.gov

NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service (NOAA Fisheries) is dedicated to protecting and preserving our nation's living marine resources through scientific research, management, enforcement, and the conservation of marine mammals and other protected marine species and their habitat. To learn more about NOAA Fisheries in Alaska, please visit our website at www.fakr.noaa.gov


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