Jason L. Hassrick
University of California, Santa Cruz
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jason L. Hassrick.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Daniel P. Costa; Patrick W. Robinson; John P. Y. Arnould; Autumn-Lynn Harrison; Samantha E. Simmons; Jason L. Hassrick; Andrew J. Hoskins; Stephen P. Kirkman; Herman Oosthuizen; Stella Villegas-Amtmann; Daniel E. Crocker
Background ARGOS satellite telemetry is one of the most widely used methods to track the movements of free-ranging marine and terrestrial animals and is fundamental to studies of foraging ecology, migratory behavior and habitat-use. ARGOS location estimates do not include complete error estimations, and for many marine organisms, the most commonly acquired locations (Location Class 0, A, B, or Z) are provided with no declared error estimate. Methodology/Principal Findings We compared the accuracy of ARGOS locations to those obtained using Fastloc GPS from the same electronic tags on five species of pinnipeds: 9 California sea lions (Zalophus californianus), 4 Galapagos sea lions (Zalophus wollebaeki), 6 Cape fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus pusillus), 3 Australian fur seals (A. p. doriferus) and 5 northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris). These species encompass a range of marine habitats (highly pelagic vs coastal), diving behaviors (mean dive durations 2–21 min) and range of latitudes (equator to temperate). A total of 7,318 ARGOS positions and 27,046 GPS positions were collected. Of these, 1,105 ARGOS positions were obtained within five minutes of a GPS position and were used for comparison. The 68th percentile ARGOS location errors as measured in this study were LC-3 0.49 km, LC-2 1.01 km, LC-1 1.20 km, LC-0 4.18 km, LC-A 6.19 km, LC-B 10.28 km. Conclusions/Significance The ARGOS errors measured here are greater than those provided by ARGOS, but within the range of other studies. The error was non-normally distributed with each LC highly right-skewed. Locations of species that make short duration dives and spend extended periods on the surface (sea lions and fur seals) had less error than species like elephant seals that spend more time underwater and have shorter surface intervals. Supplemental data (S1) are provided allowing the creation of density distributions that can be used in a variety of filtering algorithms to improve the quality of ARGOS tracking data.
Nature Communications | 2013
Sara M. Maxwell; Elliott L. Hazen; Steven J. Bograd; Benjamin S. Halpern; Greg A. Breed; Barry Nickel; Nicole M. Teutschel; Larry B. Crowder; Scott R. Benson; Peter H. Dutton; Helen Bailey; Michelle A. Kappes; Carey E. Kuhn; Michael J. Weise; Bruce R. Mate; Scott A. Shaffer; Jason L. Hassrick; Robert W. Henry; Ladd Irvine; Birgitte I. McDonald; Patrick W. Robinson; Barbara A. Block; Daniel P. Costa
Stressors associated with human activities interact in complex ways to affect marine ecosystems, yet we lack spatially explicit assessments of cumulative impacts on ecologically and economically key components such as marine predators. Here we develop a metric of cumulative utilization and impact (CUI) on marine predators by combining electronic tracking data of eight protected predator species (n=685 individuals) in the California Current Ecosystem with data on 24 anthropogenic stressors. We show significant variation in CUI with some of the highest impacts within US National Marine Sanctuaries. High variation in underlying species and cumulative impact distributions means that neither alone is sufficient for effective spatial management. Instead, comprehensive management approaches accounting for both cumulative human impacts and trade-offs among multiple stressors must be applied in planning the use of marine resources.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Patrick W. Robinson; Daniel P. Costa; Daniel E. Crocker; Juan Pablo Gallo-Reynoso; Cory D. Champagne; Melinda A. Fowler; Chandra Goetsch; Kimberly T. Goetz; Jason L. Hassrick; Luis A. Hückstädt; Carey E. Kuhn; Jennifer L. Maresh; Sara M. Maxwell; Birgitte I. McDonald; Sarah H. Peterson; Samantha E. Simmons; Nicole M. Teutschel; Stella Villegas-Amtmann; Ken Yoda
The mesopelagic zone of the northeast Pacific Ocean is an important foraging habitat for many predators, yet few studies have addressed the factors driving basin-scale predator distributions or inter-annual variability in foraging and breeding success. Understanding these processes is critical to reveal how conditions at sea cascade to population-level effects. To begin addressing these challenging questions, we collected diving, tracking, foraging success, and natality data for 297 adult female northern elephant seal migrations from 2004 to 2010. During the longer post-molting migration, individual energy gain rates were significant predictors of pregnancy. At sea, seals focused their foraging effort along a narrow band corresponding to the boundary between the sub-arctic and sub-tropical gyres. In contrast to shallow-diving predators, elephant seals target the gyre-gyre boundary throughout the year rather than follow the southward winter migration of surface features, such as the Transition Zone Chlorophyll Front. We also assessed the impact of added transit costs by studying seals at a colony near the southern extent of the species’ range, 1,150 km to the south. A much larger proportion of seals foraged locally, implying plasticity in foraging strategies and possibly prey type. While these findings are derived from a single species, the results may provide insight to the foraging patterns of many other meso-pelagic predators in the northeast Pacific Ocean.
The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2010
Jason L. Hassrick; Daniel E. Crocker; Nicole M. Teutschel; Birgitte I. McDonald; Patrick W. Robinson; Samantha E. Simmons; Daniel P. Costa
SUMMARY The range of foraging behaviors available to deep-diving, air-breathing marine vertebrates is constrained by their physiological capacity to breath-hold dive. We measured body oxygen stores (blood volume and muscle myoglobin) and diving behavior in adult female northern elephant seals, Mirounga angustirostris, to investigate age-related effects on diving performance. Blood volume averaged 74.4±17.0 liters in female elephant seals or 20.2±2.0% of body mass. Plasma volume averaged 32.2±7.8 liters or 8.7±0.7% of body mass. Absolute plasma volume and blood volume increased independently with mass and age. Hematocrit decreased weakly with mass but did not vary with age. Muscle myoglobin concentration, while higher than previously reported (7.4±0.7 g%), did not vary with mass or age. Pregnancy status did not influence blood volume. Mean dive duration, a proxy for physiological demand, increased as a function of how long seals had been at sea, followed by mass and hematocrit. Strong effects of female body mass (range, 218-600 kg) on dive duration, which were independent of oxygen stores, suggest that larger females had lower diving metabolic rates. A tendency for dives to exceed calculated aerobic limits occurred more frequently later in the at-sea migration. Our data suggest that individual physiological state variables and condition interact to determine breath-hold ability and that both should be considered in life-history studies of foraging behavior.
Functional Ecology | 2013
Jason L. Hassrick; Daniel E. Crocker; Daniel P. Costa
Summary 1. Animals that show indeterminate growth and put relatively constant proportions of stored body reserves towards annual reproductive effort are confronted with a problem of meeting ever-increasing energetic demands in unpredictable environments. 2. We examined how intrinsic traits, mass and age, as well as extrinsic environmental features impact diving and movement behaviour in a marine capital breeder, the northern elephant seal, Mirounga angustirostris. We assessed the impact of this behavioural variation on foraging success, measured as energy gained at sea. 3. We used principal component analysis to reduce behavioural variables into three principal components that described time in foraging zones (PC1), foraging distance (PC2) and bout structure of dive shapes (PC3). 4. Both intrinsic traits and extrinsic environmental features influenced behaviour and foraging success. Body mass was the sole predictor of residence time in foraging zones (PC1), which, in turn, was the strongest behavioural predictor of foraging efficiency and success over the short postbreeding season. Foraging distance (PC2) significantly varied with year. Since foraging distance is an index of the horizontal and vertical distances seals travel while foraging, we suggest that it was impacted by inter-annual variation in marine prey distribution. Age had a negligible impact on most aspects of behaviour, except for the structure of dive shapes on the postmoult foraging trip. 5. All principal components significantly impacted rates of energy gain for postbreeding foraging trips when maternal body stores must be recovered quickly before returning to shore to moult. Age impacted the bout structure of dives in pregnant females in a way that influenced success, suggesting a role for previous experience during the long postmoult foraging migration. 6. Strong impacts of body mass on diving ability, foraging success and reproductive effort suggest a proximate mechanism for trade-offs in the cost of reproduction. Mass lost to current investment in offspring impacts a mother’s ability to accrue resources for future offspring.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Sarah H. Peterson; Jason L. Hassrick; Anne Lafontaine; Jean-Pierre Thomé; Daniel E. Crocker; Cathy Debier; Daniel P. Costa
Persistent organic pollutants, including polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), are widely distributed and detectable far from anthropogenic sources. Northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) biannually travel thousands of kilometers to forage in coastal and open-ocean regions of the northeast Pacific Ocean and then return to land where they fast while breeding and molting. Our study examined potential effects of age, adipose percent, and the difference between the breeding and molting fasts on PCB concentrations and congener profiles in blubber and serum of northern elephant seal females. Between 2005 and 2007, we sampled blubber and blood from 58 seals before and after a foraging trip, which were then analyzed for PCBs. Age did not significantly affect total PCB concentrations; however, the proportion of PCB congeners with different numbers of chlorine atoms was significantly affected by age, especially in the outer blubber. Younger adult females had a significantly greater proportion of low-chlorinated PCBs (tri-, tetra-, and penta-CBs) than older females, with the opposite trend observed for hepta-CBs, indicating that an age-associated process such as parity (birth) may significantly affect congener profiles. The percent of adipose tissue had a significant relationship with inner blubber PCB concentrations, with the highest mean concentrations observed at the end of the molting fast. These results highlight the importance of sampling across the entire blubber layer when assessing contaminant levels in phocid seals and taking into account the adipose stores and reproductive status of an animal when conducting contaminant research.
Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2007
Jason L. Hassrick; Daniel E. Crocker; Ramona L. Zeno; Susanna B. Blackwell; Daniel P. Costa; Burney J. Le Boeuf
Endangered Species Research | 2010
Samantha E. Simmons; Daniel E. Crocker; Jason L. Hassrick; Carey E. Kuhn; Patrick W. Robinson; Yann Tremblay; Daniel P. Costa
Journal of Zoology | 2008
R. L. Zeno; Daniel E. Crocker; Jason L. Hassrick; S. G. Allen; Daniel P. Costa
Fisheries Oceanography | 2016
Jason L. Hassrick; Mark J. Henderson; David D. Huff; William J. Sydeman; Megan C. Sabal; Jeffrey A. Harding; Arnold J. Ammann; Eric D. Crandall; Eric P. Bjorkstedt; John Carlos Garza; Sean A. Hayes