Jeanniard-du-Dot Tiphaine, Trites Andrew W, Arnould John P Y, Guinet Christophe
Marine Mammal Research Unit, Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Centre d'Etudes Biologiques de Chizé, CNRS, Villiers en Bois, France.
PLoS One. 2017 Apr 28;12(4):e0174001. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0174001. eCollection 2017.
The efficiency with which individuals extract energy from their environment defines their survival and reproductive success, and thus their selective contribution to the population. Individuals that forage more efficiently (i.e., when energy gained exceeds energy expended) are likely to be more successful at raising viable offspring than individuals that forage less efficiently. Our goal was to test this prediction in large long-lived mammals under free-ranging conditions. To do so, we equipped 20 lactating Antarctic fur seals (Arctocephalus gazella) breeding on Kerguelen Island in the Southern Ocean with tags that recorded GPS locations, depth and tri-axial acceleration to determine at-sea behaviours and detailed time-activity budgets during their foraging trips. We also simultaneously measured energy spent at sea using the doubly-labeled water (DLW) method, and estimated the energy acquired while foraging from 1) type and energy content of prey species present in scat remains, and 2) numbers of prey capture attempts determined from head acceleration. Finally, we followed the growth of 36 pups from birth until weaning (of which 20 were the offspring of our 20 tracked mothers), and used the relative differences in body mass of pups at weaning as an index of first year survival and thus the reproductive success of their mothers. Our results show that females with greater foraging efficiencies produced relatively bigger pups at weaning. These mothers achieved greater foraging efficiency by extracting more energy per minute of diving rather than by reducing energy expenditure. This strategy also resulted in the females spending less time diving and less time overall at sea, which allowed them to deliver higher quality milk to their pups, or allowed their pups to suckle more frequently, or both. The linkage we demonstrate between reproductive success and the quality of individuals as foragers provides an individual-based quantitative framework to investigate how changes in the availability and accessibility of prey can affect fitness of animals.
个体从环境中获取能量的效率决定了它们的生存和繁殖成功率,进而决定了它们对种群的选择性贡献。觅食效率更高的个体(即获取的能量超过消耗的能量时)比觅食效率较低的个体更有可能成功养育出能存活的后代。我们的目标是在自由放养条件下的大型长寿哺乳动物中验证这一预测。为此,我们给在南大洋克尔格伦岛繁殖的20只正在哺乳的南极毛皮海狮(南极海狗)佩戴了标签,这些标签记录了GPS位置、深度和三轴加速度,以确定它们在觅食之旅中的海上行为和详细的时间活动预算。我们还同时使用双标记水(DLW)方法测量了它们在海上消耗的能量,并根据以下两点估计了觅食时获取的能量:1)粪便残余物中猎物种类的类型和能量含量;2)根据头部加速度确定的猎物捕获尝试次数。最后,我们跟踪了36只幼崽从出生到断奶的生长情况(其中20只是我们跟踪的20只母海狮的后代),并将断奶时幼崽体重的相对差异作为第一年生存的指标,从而作为其母亲繁殖成功率的指标。我们的结果表明,觅食效率更高的雌性海狮在断奶时能产出相对更大的幼崽。这些母亲通过在每分钟潜水时获取更多能量而不是减少能量消耗来实现更高的觅食效率。这种策略还导致雌性海狮在海上潜水的时间更少,总体在海上的时间也更少,这使它们能够为幼崽提供更高质量的乳汁,或者让幼崽更频繁地 suckle,或者两者兼而有之。我们所证明的繁殖成功率与个体作为觅食者的质量之间的联系,提供了一个基于个体的定量框架,以研究猎物的可获得性和可获取性的变化如何影响动物的适应性。