Tackaberry Jennifer E, Cade David E, Goldbogen Jeremy A, Wiley David N, Friedlaender Ari S, Stimpert Alison K
Vertebrate Ecology Lab, Moss Landing Marine Laboratories, Moss Landing, CA, United States of America.
Cascadia Research Collective, Olympia, WA, United States of America.
PeerJ. 2020 Mar 4;8:e8538. doi: 10.7717/peerj.8538. eCollection 2020.
Nursing influences growth rate and overall health of mammals; however, the behavior is difficult to study in wild cetaceans because it occurs below the surface and can thus be misidentified from surface observations. Nursing has been observed in humpback whales on the breeding and calving grounds, but the behavior remains unstudied on the feeding grounds. We instrumented three dependent calves (four total deployments) with combined video and 3D-accelerometer data loggers (CATS) on two United States feeding grounds to document nursing events. Two associated mothers were also tagged to determine if behavior diagnostic of nursing was evident in the mother's movement. Animal-borne video was manually analyzed and the average duration of successful nursing events was 23 s (±7 sd, = 11). Nursing occurred at depths between 4.1-64.4 m (along the seafloor) and in close temporal proximity to foraging events by the mothers, but could not be predicted solely by relative positions of mother and calf. When combining all calf deployments, successful nursing was documented eleven times; totaling only 0.3% of 21.0 hours of video. During nursing events, calves had higher overall dynamic body acceleration (ODBA) and increased fluke-stroke rate (FSR) compared to non-nursing segments (Mixed effect models, ODBA: F1,107 = 13.57756, = 0.0004, FSR: F1,107 = 32.31018, < 0.0001). In contrast, mothers had lower ODBA and reduced FSR during nursing events compared to non-nursing segments. These data provide the first characterization of accelerometer data of humpback whale nursing confirmed by animal-borne video tags and the first analysis of nursing events on feeding grounds. This is an important step in understanding the energetic consequences of lactation while foraging.
哺乳会影响哺乳动物的生长速度和整体健康;然而,这种行为在野生鲸类动物中很难研究,因为它发生在水面以下,因此从水面观察可能会被误认。在座头鲸的繁殖和产犊地观察到了哺乳行为,但在觅食地的这种行为仍未得到研究。我们在美国的两个觅食地为三头依赖母亲哺乳的幼鲸(共进行了四次部署)安装了结合视频和三维加速度计的数据记录器(CATS),以记录哺乳事件。还为两头相关的母鲸安装了标签,以确定在母鲸的活动中是否有明显的哺乳行为特征。对动物携带的视频进行了人工分析,成功哺乳事件的平均持续时间为23秒(±7标准差,n = 11)。哺乳发生在4.1 - 64.4米(沿海底)的深度,并且在时间上与母鲸的觅食活动密切相关,但不能仅通过母鲸和幼鲸的相对位置来预测。将所有幼鲸的部署情况综合起来,成功记录到11次哺乳行为;仅占21.0小时视频的0.3%。在哺乳事件中,与非哺乳时段相比,幼鲸的总体动态身体加速度(ODBA)更高,尾鳍摆动频率(FSR)增加(混合效应模型,ODBA:F1,107 = 13.57756,p = 0.0004,FSR:F1,107 = 32.31018,p < 0.0001)。相比之下,与非哺乳时段相比,母鲸在哺乳事件中的ODBA较低,FSR降低。这些数据首次通过动物携带的视频标签对座头鲸哺乳的加速度计数据进行了描述,并首次对觅食地的哺乳事件进行了分析。这是在理解觅食时哺乳的能量后果方面迈出的重要一步。