For
the last five years I've been traveling to
Hornby Island, BC to dive
and play with the Stellar sea lions that migrate there during the winter
months to wait to feed on the annual herring spawn. They are an incredibly friendly
bunch who are accustomed to divers visiting and interacting with them.
This year we ran into one special pup who appeared to be "instrumented". The dive lodge owners were aware of the animal, but not aware of any studies under way in their area at the time. I sent some photos of him to Donna Gibbs at the Vancouver Aquarium whom I had met on previous specimen collecting trips in British Columbia and asked if she had heard of any studies going on at Hornby. She had not but told me she'd ask around the local marine biologists' community.
A month later I received a response from Peter Olesiuk from the Canadian Department of Fisheries and Oceans. Turns out the blue headed guy I ran into on Hornby was one of twelve instrumented animals that are part of this year's study on foraging behaviors. Peter generously gave his time to explain the details of the study to me by email. I have found the information on the behaviors and travel patterns of these guys so interesting from Peter's study that it makes you look at sea lions in the water in a whole new way, curious how long they've been at their current site and how far they've traveled in the last few months. Below is the full context of Peter Olesiuk's combined mail thread on the study.
More images from the trips can be found at my website .
Marty Steinberg.
By the way,there is also a branded Steller sea lion in the photos - 145Y. The animal was branded as a pup on Rogue Reef off Oregon in July 2003 by my colleagues with ODF&W (Oregon Dept of Fish & Wildlife). I'm keeping track of resightings for them and will pass this one along. They are tracking the branded animals to determine survival and reproductive rates, and we are also learning much about movements. Interestingly, moms with young animals tend to disperse quite far from rookeries where they breed, but then the youngsters tend to park on a particular haulout site while mom is off foraging.
It
will be a while before our study is complete and all the information
processed. We tagged 12 sea lions this year, and hope to do 12-15 again
next year. The attached map shows the locations received by satellite
(yellow indicates at-sea locations, and red indicates on land, with larger
circles representing more accurate positions). As you can see, the main
foraging area has been in the northern Strait of Georgia, where herring
stocks have been staging in preparation for spawning. One of our goals is
to monitor sea lion movements as the herring spawn and disperse, and sea
lions switch to other prey. The complete story won't be told until we
recover the time-depth recorders in April, which will provide very detailed
information on diving and haulout behaviour (at 10 sec intervals over a
period of several months!). Although most of the animals have been foraging
in the northern Strait of Georgia, you'll notice a few positions out on the
west coast. These represent the longer-range movements of two subadult
males. One headed south out through Juan de Fuca and up the west coast of
the Island and is currently sitting at Hope Island off the north tip of
Vancouver Island. The other headed north through Johnstone Strait and then
down the west coast of Vancouver Island, and is currently sitting at Cape
Alava off the Washington coast. Interestingly, these animals seem to
know where all the traditional haulout areas are situated, and make frequent
stopovers at them.
******************************
Peter F. Olesiuk
Marine Mammal Biologist
Head, Seal and Sea Lion Program
Conservation Biology Section
Department of Fisheries and Oceans
Pacific Biological Station
Nanaimo, B.C.
Very interesting. I have yet to dive Hornby but fly into Comox on my way up to Port Hardy each year. Have you had a chance to see 6 gills yet?