Dept. of Anesthesia, Critical Care, and Pain Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Dept. of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Dec 23;8(12):e83248. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0083248. eCollection 2013.
Although energetics is fundamental to animal ecology, traditional methods of determining metabolic rate are neither direct nor instantaneous. Recently, continuous blood oxygen (O2) measurements were used to assess energy expenditure in diving elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris), demonstrating that an exceptional hypoxemic tolerance and exquisite management of blood O2 stores underlie the extraordinary diving capability of this consummate diver. As the detailed relationship of energy expenditure and dive behavior remains unknown, we integrated behavior, ecology, and physiology to characterize the costs of different types of dives of elephant seals. Elephant seal dive profiles were analyzed and O2 utilization was classified according to dive type (overall function of dive: transit, foraging, food processing/rest). This is the first account linking behavior at this level with in vivo blood O2 measurements in an animal freely diving at sea, allowing us to assess patterns of O2 utilization and energy expenditure between various behaviors and activities in an animal in the wild. In routine dives of elephant seals, the blood O2 store was significantly depleted to a similar range irrespective of dive function, suggesting that all dive types have equal costs in terms of blood O2 depletion. Here, we present the first physiological evidence that all dive types have similarly high blood O2 demands, supporting an energy balance strategy achieved by devoting one major task to a given dive, thereby separating dive functions into distinct dive types. This strategy may optimize O2 store utilization and recovery, consequently maximizing time underwater and allowing these animals to take full advantage of their underwater resources. This approach may be important to optimizing energy expenditure throughout a dive bout or at-sea foraging trip and is well suited to the lifestyle of an elephant seal, which spends > 90% of its time at sea submerged making diving its most "natural" state.
尽管能量学是动物生态学的基础,但传统的确定代谢率的方法既不是直接的,也不是即时的。最近,连续的血氧(O2)测量被用来评估潜水象海豹(Mirounga angustirostris)的能量消耗,这表明一种特殊的低氧耐受能力和对血液 O2 储存的精妙管理是这种完美潜水者非凡潜水能力的基础。由于能量消耗和潜水行为之间的详细关系尚不清楚,我们将行为、生态学和生理学结合起来,以描述象海豹不同类型潜水的成本。对象海豹的潜水剖面进行了分析,并根据潜水类型(潜水的总体功能:转移、觅食、食物处理/休息)对 O2 的利用进行了分类。这是首次将这种行为与在海自由潜水的动物体内的活体血液 O2 测量联系起来,使我们能够评估各种行为和活动之间的 O2 利用和能量消耗模式。在象海豹的常规潜水过程中,无论潜水功能如何,血液 O2 储存都会明显消耗到相似的范围,这表明所有潜水类型在血液 O2 消耗方面都具有相同的成本。在这里,我们首次提供了生理证据,证明所有潜水类型都具有类似的高血液 O2 需求,支持了通过将一项主要任务分配给特定的潜水来实现能量平衡的策略,从而将潜水功能分为不同的潜水类型。这种策略可能优化了 O2 储存的利用和恢复,从而最大限度地延长水下时间,使这些动物能够充分利用其水下资源。这种方法对于优化潜水期间或海上觅食期间的能量消耗可能很重要,并且非常适合象海豹的生活方式,它们 90%以上的时间都在水下潜水,使其成为最“自然”的状态。