Not logged in
PANGAEA.
Data Publisher for Earth & Environmental Science

Schröder, Henning; Held, Christoph; Bornemann, Horst (2026): Under water video footage from Weddell seal NEU2024_wed_a_m_05_1 taken by seal mounted cameras during expedition ANT-Land_2024_SEAEIS (NEU2024) [dataset bundled publication]. PANGAEA, https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.993218 (DOI registration in progress)

Always quote citation above when using data! You can download the citation in several formats below.

Published: 2026-04-22

RIS CitationBibTeX Citation ShareShow MapGoogle Earth

Abstract:
SEAls and cryobenthic communities at the Ekström Ice Shelf (SEAEIS) applies biologging technologies for studying the foraging ecology of Weddell seals with a direct link to the investigation of cryobenthic invertebrate communities beneath the Ekström Ice Shelf at Atka Bay. Incidences of cryobenthic communities beneath ice shelves are rare and recent discoveries. Combined seal- and ROV-borne imagery and novel sampling technologies led to the discovery of a cryobenthic isopod community (Antarcturus cf. spinacoronatus Schultz 1978), being attached head-down to the underside of floating shelf ice at Drescher Inlet (Riiser-Larsen Ice Shelf) at depths of around 80-150 m (Watanabe et al. 2006; Bornemann et al. 2016). These "hanging gardens" may represent a food horizon where seals could benefit from a local hotspot of high biologic activity. The presence of isopod aggregations explained a multimodal distribution of the seals' dive depths known from earlier investigations at Drescher Inlet, and could probably also be indicative for increased abundances of seals in Areas of Ecological Significance (AES) at the interface between shelf and sea ice. However, the question whether the aforementioned findings are representative for the far-ranging high Antarctic ice shelves or even unique remains open, and factors contributing to AES and their stability over time are largely unexplored. Therefore, we proposed a synoptic field study at Atka Bay (Neumayer Station III), where earlier deployments of satellite-linked data loggers also showed a mode in the distribution of bottom times spent at water depths corresponding to the underside of the floating shelf ice, thus supporting the hypothesis of ice shelf associated foraging. For details and results on the campaign ANT-Land_2024_SEAEIS (NEU2024) see Held et al. 2026.
Keyword(s):
Animal-borne underwater video footage; Leptonychotes weddellii; Weddell seal
Related to:
Held, Christoph; Schröder, Henning; Bornemann, Horst (2026): Seals and cryo-benthic communities at the Ekström Ice Shelf (SEAEIS). In: Regnery J, Matz T, Köhler P & Wesche C. Expeditions to Antarctica: ANT-Land 2024/25 NEUMAYER STATION III, Kohnen Station and Field Campaigns, Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung = Reports on Polar and Marine Research, 121-151, https://doi.org/10.57738/bzpm_0807_2026
References:
Bornemann, Horst; Held, Christoph; Nachtsheim, Dominik A; Owsianowski, Nils; Richter, Claudio; Steinmetz, Richard (2016): Seal research at the Drescher Inlet (SEADI). in: Schröder, M (ed.) The Expedition PS96 of the Research Vessel POLARSTERN to the southern Weddell Sea in 2015/2016. Berichte zur Polar- und Meeresforschung = Reports on polar and marine research, Bremerhaven, Alfred-Wegener-Institut Helmholtz-Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung, 700, 148 pp, 116-129, https://doi.org/10.2312/BzPM_0700_2016
Watanabe, Yuuki; Bornemann, Horst; Liebsch, Nikolai S; Plötz, Joachim; Sato, Katsufumi; Naito, Yasuhiko; Miyazaki, Nobuyuki (2006): Seal-mounted cameras detect invertebrate fauna on the underside of an Antarctic ice shelf. Marine Ecology Progress Series, 309, 297-300, https://doi.org/10.3354/meps309297
Coverage:
Latitude: -70.531060 * Longitude: -8.200580
Date/Time Start: 2024-12-04T21:38:05 * Date/Time End: 2024-12-05T09:38:04
Size:
5 datasets

Download Data

Download ZIP file containing all datasets as tab-delimited text — use the following character encoding: