Arranz Patricia, Benoit-Bird Kelly J, Southall Brandon L, Calambokidis John, Friedlaender Ari S, Tyack Peter L
Sea Mammal Research Unit, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, East Sands, St Andrews KY16 8LB, UK
Department of Animal Biology, University of La Laguna, Avda. Astrofisico Fco Sanchez s/n, La Laguna 36200, Tenerife, Spain.
J Exp Biol. 2018 Feb 28;221(Pt 4):jeb165209. doi: 10.1242/jeb.165209.
Humans remember the past and use that information to plan future actions. Lab experiments that test memory for the location of food show that animals have a similar capability to act in anticipation of future needs, but less work has been done on animals foraging in the wild. We hypothesized that planning abilities are critical and common in breath-hold divers who adjust each dive to forage on prey varying in quality, location and predictability within constraints of limited oxygen availability. We equipped Risso's dolphins with sound-and-motion recording tags to reveal where they focus their attention through their externally observable echolocation and how they fine tune search strategies in response to expected and observed prey distribution. The information from the dolphins was integrated with synoptic prey data obtained from echosounders on an underwater vehicle. At the start of the dives, whales adjusted their echolocation inspection ranges in ways that suggest planning to forage at a particular depth. Once entering a productive prey layer, dolphins reduced their search range comparable to the scale of patches within the layer, suggesting that they were using echolocation to select prey within the patch. On ascent, their search range increased, indicating that they decided to stop foraging within that layer and started searching for prey in shallower layers. Information about prey, learned throughout the dive, was used to plan foraging in the next dive. Our results demonstrate that planning for future dives is modulated by spatial memory derived from multi-modal prey sampling (echoic, visual and capture) during earlier dives.
人类会记住过去,并利用这些信息来规划未来的行动。测试对食物位置记忆的实验室实验表明,动物也具有类似的能力,能够预期未来的需求而采取行动,但针对野生动物觅食行为的研究较少。我们推测,在屏息潜水者中,规划能力至关重要且普遍存在,他们在有限的氧气供应限制下,根据猎物的质量、位置和可预测性的变化,调整每次潜水以觅食。我们为里氏海豚配备了声音和运动记录标签,以揭示它们通过外部可观察到的回声定位将注意力集中在哪里,以及它们如何根据预期和观察到的猎物分布来微调搜索策略。来自海豚的信息与从水下航行器上的回声测深仪获得的全景猎物数据相结合。在潜水开始时,海豚会以一种表明计划在特定深度觅食的方式调整它们的回声定位探测范围。一旦进入高产猎物层,海豚会将搜索范围缩小到与该层内斑块规模相当的程度,这表明它们正在利用回声定位在斑块内选择猎物。在上升过程中,它们的搜索范围增加,这表明它们决定停止在该层觅食,并开始在较浅的水层中寻找猎物。在整个潜水中学到的关于猎物的信息,被用于规划下一次潜水的觅食行为。我们的研究结果表明,未来潜水的规划是由早期潜水中通过多模态猎物采样(回声、视觉和捕获)获得的空间记忆所调节的。