Sea otter study reveals striking variability in diets and feeding strategies
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14th January, 2008
Tim Stephens
University of California Press Release via Eurekalert
SANTA CRUZ, CA--Ecologists have long observed that when food becomes
scarce, animal populations exploit a wider range of food sources. So
scientists studying southern sea otters at different sites in California's
coastal waters were not surprised to find that the dietary diversity
of the population is higher where food is limited. But this diversity
was not reflected in the diets of individual sea otters, which instead
showed dietary specialization in response to limited food.
The new findings by researchers at the University of California, Santa
Cruz, will be published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences the week of January 14. The study found that all sea otters
in an area with abundant food resources share the same dietary preferences.
Where food is limited, however, a diverse array of feeding strategies
emerges, with individual sea otters specializing on particular types
of prey.
Tim Tinker, a UCSC research biologist and first author of the paper,
said the study has both theoretical implications for the science of ecology
and practical implications for wildlife management.
"The traditional way of viewing the relationships between predators
and prey and how food webs are structured may be oversimplified," Tinker
said. "When you look at the population as a whole, you may see a
diversification of the diet in response to limited food resources. But
when you look at individuals, you see dietary specialization."
One implication of this dietary specialization for California sea otters
is that some otters may be exposed to certain food-borne pathogens much
more frequently than otters with different diets. "A lot of sea
otters in the Central Coast population are dying from infectious diseases,
and this could help us to better understand that disease mortality by
allowing us to pinpoint the specific vectors of disease transmission," Tinker
said.
Tinker's coauthors on the paper are Gena Bentall, who worked on the
study as a UCSC graduate student and is now with the Monterey Bay Aquarium's
sea otter research and conservation group; and James Estes, an adjunct
professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UCSC and a wildlife
ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. The study compared sea otters
on the Central Coast, which has the largest population of southern sea
otters, to those in a much smaller population around San Nicolas Island
off the coast of Southern California.
The San Nicolas population is the result of an effort by the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service to reduce the vulnerability of California sea otters
to oil spills by establishing a separate population from the main one
on the Central Coast. In the late 1980s, about 140 sea otters were relocated
to San Nicolas Island. Most of them soon returned to the mainland, but
the few that remained have prospered. With plenty of food to go around,
the San Nicolas otters are in better shape than their mainland counterparts,
and their population is now growing much faster than the Central Coast
population.
"The San Nicolas otters are much bigger than the mainland animals,
their body condition is better, and they spend less time feeding," Tinker
said. "When we looked at individual diets, a few key prey types
dominated, and each otter's diet looked pretty much like every other
otter's diet."
The otters' preferred prey are the large, energy-rich red sea urchins,
which are abundant around San Nicolas Island. On the Central Coast, red
sea urchins are much less common than the smaller purple sea urchins.
The San Nicolas otters also eat marine snails and crabs, but there is
little difference between the population as a whole and individual otters
in terms of dietary diversity. Each otter is a generalist, with the same
preferences as other otters.
The mainland population is dramatically different. While the diet of
the population as a whole is much more diversified than at San Nicolas,
individual diets are more specialized. Estes said it is not surprising
that animals are highly individual in the way they feed, but the link
between individual specialization and resource availability is new.
"What's new in this paper is that individuality is a plastic characteristic
that emerges when resources become limited," Estes said. "We're
seeing this in sea otters, but it probably occurs broadly in nature.
It may apply to people, too. When there were just a few people running
around on the face of the Earth, they were probably all doing pretty
much the same thing."
Individuality in feeding behavior adds a new level of complexity to
the dynamics of food webs. For wildlife managers, it means that each
animal has to be considered as an individual and may not be representative
of the whole population. But the findings also suggest a potentially
useful tool for assessing the status of wildlife populations, Estes said.
"It's very hard to know where a population stands with respect
to resource limitation--we're always asking if a population is limited
by the availability of food," he said. "We could conceivably
look for individuality in foraging behavior as an indication that food
limitation is an important factor."
According to Estes, scientists were already convinced before this study
was completed that the availability of food is limiting the Central Coast
sea otter population. He said the same situation probably prevailed throughout
California before fur traders began hunting sea otters in the 18th century,
eventually driving them to the brink of extinction. But it is not clear
why sea otters are not spreading out into other areas along the California
coast where they would find more food than on the Central Coast.
"Why this population does not expand into food rich areas is one
of the perplexing challenges we have not been able to figure out," Estes
said.
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