Kk. Hastings et al., Interannual variation in survival of juvenile Weddell seals (Leptonychotesweddellii) from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica: effects of cohort, sex and age, J ZOOL, 248, 1999, pp. 307-323
Survival of juvenile Weddell seals Leptonychotes weddellii in McMurdo Sound
, Antarctica was examined using 25 years of tagging and resighting data. Us
ing mark-recapture models, we estimated age- and sex-specific apparent surv
ival (survival confounded with emigration) rates of Weddell seals from birt
h to 6 years of age for 17 cohorts (1973-89). Survival in the first 2 years
of life (0.429 and 0.635 for the first and second years, respectively) was
lower than annual survival after 2 years of age (0.806), and was significa
ntly lower for males than for females. First-year survival of the 1978 and
1983 cohorts was significantly lower than average first-year survival acros
s cohorts. Reproductive rate of adult females was significantly correlated
with first-year survival in concurrent years, but not when first-year survi
val lagged reproductive rate by 1 year nor with annual survival after 1 yea
r of age. This correlation, however, was only significant in male first-yea
r survival, possibly indicating that survival of males is more dependent on
maternal or environmental conditions than survival of females. Average wea
ning mass varied significantly among cohorts and was nearly correlated to r
eproductive rate of adult females. This may indicate that maternal conditio
n is reduced in years of low reproduction although more data are needed to
test this conclusively.