Polar Bear Diets and Arctic Marine Food Webs: Insights from Fatty Acid Analysis
Date
2008-11
Authors
Thiemann, Gregory W.
Iverson, Sara J.
Stirling, Ian
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Abstract
We used quantitative fatty acid signature analysis (QFASA) to examine the diets of 1738
individual polar bears (Ursus maritimus) sampled across the Canadian Arctic over a 30-year span.
Polar bear foraging varied over large and small spatial and temporal scales, and between demographic
groups. Diets in every subpopulation were dominated by ringed seals (Phoca hispida) and, in the
eastern Arctic, secondarily by harp seals (Pagophilus groenlandica). Beluga whales (Delphinapterus
leucas) were an important food source for bears in the High Arctic, which is consistent with
previous anecdotal reports. Foraging patterns were most similar among neighboring subpopulations
with similar prey assemblages, but also differed geographically within Western Hudson Bay. The
sexual size dimorphism of polar bears had an important effect on foraging, as large bearded seals
(Erignathus barbatus) and walruses (Odobenus rosmarus) were consumed most often by older, male
bears, whereas ringed seals and, where available, harbor seals (P. vitulina) were most important to
younger age classes. Larger, older bears also had the greatest dietary diversity, apparently because
of their ability to include larger-bodied prey. During spring and summer, polar bears in some areas
increased predation on migratory harp seals and beluga whales. In Western Hudson Bay, bearded seal
consumption declined between 1995 and 2001 for both male and female bears and continued to decline
among females up to the most recent sampling (2004). Ringed seal consumption in Western Hudson Bay
increased between 1998 and 2001, perhaps in response to increased ringed seal productivity, but was
not significantly affected by date of sea-ice breakup. Overall, our data indicate that polar bears
are capable of opportunistically altering their foraging to take advantage of locally abundant prey,
or to some degree compensating for a decline in a dominant prey species. However, in other areas
polar bears are dependent on the availability of ringed and bearded seals. Recent population data
suggest that polar bears with the most specialized diets may be most vulnerable to climate-related
changes in ice conditions. The results of this large-scale, ecosystem-based study indicate a complex
relationship between sea-ice conditions, prey population dynamics, and polar bear foraging.
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Citation
Thiemann, Gregory W., Sara J. Iverson, and Ian Stirling. 2008. "Polar Bear Diets and Arctic Marine Food Webs: Insights from Fatty Acid Analysis." Ecological Monographs 78(4): 591-613.
Copyright by the Ecological Society of America