Supplementary material from "Survival of adult Steller sea lions in Alaska: senescence, annual variation and covariation with male reproductive success"
Version 2 2018-01-16, 07:54Version 2 2018-01-16, 07:54
Version 1 2018-01-09, 10:23Version 1 2018-01-09, 10:23
Population dynamics of long-lived vertebrates depend critically on adult survival, yet factors affecting survival and covariation between survival and other vital rates in adults remain poorly examined for many taxonomic groups of long-lived mammals (e.g. actuarial senescence has been examined for only 9 of 34 extant pinniped species using longitudinal data). We used mark–recapture models and data from 2795 Steller sea lion (<i>Eumetopias jubatus</i>) pups individually marked at four of five rookeries in southeastern Alaska (SEAK) and resighted for 21 years to examine senescence, annual variability and covariation among life-history traits in this long-lived, sexually dimorphic pinniped. Sexes differed in age of onset (approx. 16–17 and approx. 8–9 years for females and males, respectively), but not rate (−0.047 and −0.046/year of age for females and males) of senescence. Survival of adult males from northern SEAK had greatest annual variability (approx. ±0.30 among years), whereas survival of adult females ranged approximately ±0.10 annually. Positive covariation between male survival and reproductive success was observed. Survival of territorial males was 0.20 higher than that of non-territorial males, resulting in the majority of males alive at oldest ages being territorial.
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K. Hastings, Kelly; A. Jemison, Lauri; W. Pendleton, Grey (2018). Supplementary material from "Survival of adult Steller sea lions in Alaska: senescence, annual variation and covariation with male reproductive success". The Royal Society. Collection. https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3971808.v2