Hatherly Laboratories, University of Exeter, College of Life & Environmental Sciences, Exeter, United Kingdom.
CEiiA, Matosinhos, Portugal.
PLoS One. 2021 Jul 28;16(7):e0253388. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253388. eCollection 2021.
While biologging tags have answered a wealth of ecological questions, the drivers and consequences of movement and activity often remain difficult to ascertain, particularly marine vertebrates which are difficult to observe directly. Basking sharks, the second largest shark species in the world, aggregate in the summer in key foraging sites but despite advances in biologging technologies, little is known about their breeding ecology and sub-surface behaviour. Advances in camera technologies holds potential for filling in these knowledge gaps by providing environmental context and validating behaviours recorded with conventional telemetry. Six basking sharks were tagged at their feeding site in the Sea of Hebrides, Scotland, with towed cameras combined with time-depth recorders and satellite telemetry. Cameras recorded a cumulative 123 hours of video data over an average 64-hour deployment and confirmed the position of the sharks within the water column. Feeding events only occurred within a metre depth and made up ¾ of the time spent swimming near the surface. Sharks maintained similar tail beat frequencies regardless of whether feeding, swimming near the surface or the seabed, where they spent surprisingly up to 88% of daylight hours. This study reported the first complete breaching event and the first sub-surface putative courtship display, with nose-to-tail chasing, parallel swimming as well as the first observation of grouping behaviour near the seabed. Social groups of sharks are thought to be very short term and sporadic, and may play a role in finding breeding partners, particularly in solitary sharks which may use aggregations as an opportunity to breed. In situ observation of basking sharks at their seasonal aggregation site through animal borne cameras revealed unprecedented insight into the social and environmental context of basking shark behaviour which were previously limited to surface observations.
尽管生物标记已经回答了大量的生态问题,但运动和活动的驱动因素和后果仍然难以确定,特别是对于海洋脊椎动物,这些动物很难直接观察。姥鲨是世界上第二大鲨鱼物种,它们在夏季聚集在关键的觅食地点,但尽管生物标记技术取得了进步,人们对它们的繁殖生态和水下行为却知之甚少。相机技术的进步有可能通过提供环境背景和验证传统遥测记录的行为来填补这些知识空白。六只姥鲨在苏格兰赫布里斯群岛的觅食地被标记,使用拖曳式相机结合时间深度记录器和卫星遥测技术。相机在平均 64 小时的部署中记录了 123 小时的视频数据,确认了鲨鱼在水柱中的位置。摄食活动仅发生在 1 米深的范围内,占游泳时间的 3/4。无论是否在进食、在水面附近游泳还是在海底,鲨鱼的尾拍频率都保持相似,它们在海底度过的时间惊人地达到了白天的 88%。本研究报告了首次完整的跃出水面事件和首次水下假定求偶展示,包括鼻对尾追逐、平行游泳以及首次观察到在海底附近的群体行为。人们认为,鲨鱼的社会群体非常短暂和零星,可能在寻找繁殖伴侣方面发挥作用,特别是在孤独的鲨鱼中,它们可能会利用聚集来繁殖。通过动物携带的相机在季节性聚集地点对姥鲨进行原位观察,揭示了姥鲨行为的前所未有的社会和环境背景,这些背景以前仅限于水面观察。