Ringed, Bearded, and Ribbon Seal Vocalizations North of Barrow, Alaska: Seasonal Presence and Relationship with Sea Ice

Authors

  • Joshua M. Jones
  • Bruce J. Thayre
  • Ethan H. Roth
  • Michael Mahoney
  • Ian Sia
  • Kayla Merculief
  • Christine Jackson
  • Clarissa Zeller
  • Mamie Clare
  • Austin Bacon
  • Samantha Weaver
  • Zoe Gentes
  • Robert J. Small
  • Ian Stirling
  • Sean M. Wiggins
  • John A. Hildebrand

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic4388

Keywords:

ringed seal, bearded seal, ribbon seal, Arctic phocid, call repertoire, seasonality, vocalization, sea ice

Abstract

The acoustic repertoires of ringed, bearded, and ribbon seals are described, along with their seasonal occurrence and relationship to sea ice concentration. Acoustic recordings were made between September and June over three years (2006 – 09) along the continental slope break in the Chukchi Sea, 120 km north-northwest of Barrow, Alaska. Vocalizations of ringed and bearded seals occurred in winter and during periods of 80% – 100% ice cover but were mostly absent during open water periods. The presence of ringed and bearded seal calls throughout winter and spring suggests that some portion of their population is overwintering. Analysis of the repertoire of ringed and bearded seal calls shows seasonal variation. Ringed seal calls are primarily barks in winter and yelps in spring, while bearded seal moans increase during spring. Ribbon seal calls were detected only in the fall of 2008 during the open water period. The repertoire of known ribbon seal vocalizations was expanded to include three additional calls, and two stereotyped call sequences were common. Retrospective analyses of ringed seal recordings from 1982 and ribbon seal recordings from 1967 showed a high degree of stability in call repertoire across large spatial and temporal scales.

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Published

2014-05-28