Le Bras Yves, Jouma'a Joffrey, Picard Baptiste, Guinet Christophe
Centre d'Etude Biologiques de Chizé, UMR, CNRS-ULR, France.
PLoS One. 2016 Dec 14;11(12):e0167226. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0167226. eCollection 2016.
Understanding the diving behaviour of diving predators in relation to concomitant prey distribution could have major practical applications in conservation biology by allowing the assessment of how changes in fine scale prey distribution impact foraging efficiency and ultimately population dynamics. The southern elephant seal (Mirounga leonina, hereafter SES), the largest phocid, is a major predator of the southern ocean feeding on myctophids and cephalopods. Because of its large size it can carry bio-loggers with minimal disturbance. Moreover, it has great diving abilities and a wide foraging habitat. Thus, the SES is a well suited model species to study predator diving behaviour and the distribution of ecologically important prey species in the Southern Ocean. In this study, we examined how SESs adjust their diving behaviour and horizontal movements in response to fine scale prey encounter densities using high resolution accelerometers, magnetometers, pressure sensors and GPS loggers. When high prey encounter rates were encountered, animals responded by (1) diving and returning to the surface with steeper angles, reducing the duration of transit dive phases (thus improving dive efficiency), and (2) exhibiting more horizontally and vertically sinuous bottom phases. In these cases, the distance travelled horizontally at the surface was reduced. This behaviour is likely to counteract horizontal displacement from water currents, as they try to remain within favourable prey patches. The prey encounter rate at the bottom of dives decreased with increasing diving depth, suggesting a combined effect of decreased accessibility and prey density with increasing depth. Prey encounter rate also decreased when the bottom phases of dives were spread across larger vertical extents of the water column. This result suggests that the vertical aggregation of prey can regulate prey density, and as a consequence impact the foraging success of SESs. To our knowledge, this is one of only a handful of studies showing how the vertical distributions and structure of prey fields influence the prey encounter rates of a diving predator.
了解潜水食肉动物的潜水行为与伴随的猎物分布之间的关系,在保护生物学中可能具有重要的实际应用价值,因为它能让我们评估精细尺度的猎物分布变化如何影响觅食效率,进而影响种群动态。南象海豹(Mirounga leonina,以下简称SES)是最大的鳍脚类动物,是南大洋以灯笼鱼和头足类动物为食的主要食肉动物。由于其体型巨大,它携带生物记录器时受到的干扰最小。此外,它具有很强的潜水能力和广阔的觅食栖息地。因此,SES是研究食肉动物潜水行为以及南大洋生态重要猎物物种分布的理想模式物种。在本研究中,我们使用高分辨率加速度计、磁力计、压力传感器和GPS记录器,研究了SES如何根据精细尺度的猎物相遇密度来调整其潜水行为和水平移动。当遇到高猎物相遇率时,动物会做出以下反应:(1)以更陡的角度潜水并返回水面,减少过渡潜水阶段的持续时间(从而提高潜水效率),以及(2)在底部阶段表现出更多的水平和垂直曲折。在这些情况下,在水面水平移动的距离会减少。这种行为可能是为了抵消水流造成的水平位移,因为它们试图停留在有利的猎物斑块内。潜水底部的猎物相遇率随着潜水深度的增加而降低,这表明随着深度增加,可及性和猎物密度降低的综合影响。当潜水的底部阶段分布在水柱更大的垂直范围内时,猎物相遇率也会降低。这一结果表明,猎物的垂直聚集可以调节猎物密度,并因此影响SES的觅食成功率。据我们所知,这是为数不多的几项研究之一,展示了猎物场的垂直分布和结构如何影响潜水食肉动物的猎物相遇率。