Sex Ratios of Harbor Seal (Phoca vitulina) Haul Out Sites in the Salish Sea
Harbor seals (Phoca vitulina) are the most abundant marine mammals in the Salish Sea, with frequent interactions with humans and predation on declining Pacific salmon (Oncorhynchus spp.) populations. We evaluated proximity to both human disturbance and prey availability relative to sex ratio of 14 haul out sites in the Salish Sea. Due to higher adult salmon proportion in diet and potentially higher risk-tolerance, we hypothesized that male dominated haul out sites would be found in areas of high human disturbance and closer to salmon runs. As a proxy for human disturbance, we collected data on marina locations and accounted for areas with vessel traffic. From public data of Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and Canada's New Salmon Escapement Database System, we compiled salmon run abundance and location data. Coordinate, area and abundance data were mapped with ArcGIS Pro to extract the proximities of marinas and salmon runs to each haul out site. All male dominated sites were < 3 km to the nearest marina, while all female dominated and evenly split sites were > 3 km, except Gertrude Island. No clear relationship was found between sex ratios and proximity to salmon runs. Density of salmon runs or marinas showed no clear relationship with haul out sites. Data indicate that, unlike males, female harbor seals prefer haul out sites further from human disturbance. We suggest that future pinniped management should consider increased risk-tolerance of male harbor seals when evaluating the Salish Sea populations through scat genetics or survey counts. (As the paper for this study will be submitted elsewhere, a personal reflection will act as a placeholder until the published research paper can be linked)
Object Details
Creators/Contributors
- Duffy, Maren - author
- Acevedo-Gutierrez, Alejandro - thesis advisor
Collection
collections WWU Honors College Senior Projects | WWU Graduate and Undergraduate Scholarship
Identifier
1924
Date Issued
April 1st, 2025
Language
Resource type
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