Silva Mariana P, Oliveira Cláudia, Prieto Rui, Silva Mónica A, New Leslie, Pérez-Jorge Sergi
Institute of Marine Sciences - OKEANOS University of the Azores Horta Portugal.
Institute of Marine Research - IMAR Horta Portugal.
Ecol Evol. 2024 Mar 24;14(3):e11135. doi: 10.1002/ece3.11135. eCollection 2024 Mar.
Determining how animals allocate energy, and how external factors influence this allocation, is crucial to understand species' life history requirements and response to disturbance. This response is driven in part by individuals' energy balance, prey characteristics, foraging behaviour and energy required for essential functions. We developed a bioenergetic model to estimate minimum foraging success rate (FSR), that is, the lowest possible prey capture rate for individuals to obtain the minimum energy intake needed to meet daily metabolic requirements, for female sperm whale (). The model was based on whales' theoretical energetic requirements using foraging and prey characteristics from animal-borne tags and stomach contents, respectively. We used this model to simulate two prey structure change scenarios: (1) decrease in mean prey size, thus lower prey energy content and (2) decrease in prey size variability, reducing the variability in prey energy content. We estimate the whales need minimum of ~14% FSR to meet their energetic requirements, and energy intake is more sensitive to energy content changes than a decrease in energy variability. To estimate vulnerability to prey structure changes, we evaluated the compensation level required to meet bioenergetic demands. Considering a minimum 14% FSR, whales would need to increase energy intake by 21% (5-35%) and 49% (27-67%) to compensate for a 15% and 30% decrease in energy content, respectively. For a 30% and 50% decrease in energy variability, whales would need to increase energy intake by 13% (0-23%) and 24% (10-35%) to meet energetic demands, respectively. Our model demonstrates how foraging and prey characteristics can be used to estimate impact of changing prey structure in top predator energetics, which can help inform bottom-up effects on marine ecosystems. We showed the importance of considering different FSR in bioenergetics models, as it can have decisive implications on estimates of energy acquired and affect the conclusions about top predator's vulnerability to possible environmental fluctuations.
确定动物如何分配能量,以及外部因素如何影响这种分配,对于理解物种的生活史需求和对干扰的反应至关重要。这种反应部分由个体的能量平衡、猎物特征、觅食行为和基本功能所需的能量驱动。我们开发了一个生物能量模型来估计最小觅食成功率(FSR),即雌性抹香鲸个体获得满足每日代谢需求所需的最低能量摄入的最低可能猎物捕获率。该模型基于鲸鱼的理论能量需求,分别使用来自动物携带标签和胃内容物的觅食和猎物特征。我们使用这个模型来模拟两种猎物结构变化情景:(1)平均猎物大小减小,从而降低猎物能量含量;(2)猎物大小变异性减小,降低猎物能量含量的变异性。我们估计鲸鱼至少需要约14%的FSR来满足其能量需求,并且能量摄入对能量含量变化比能量变异性降低更敏感。为了估计对猎物结构变化的脆弱性,我们评估了满足生物能量需求所需的补偿水平。考虑到最低14%的FSR,鲸鱼需要分别将能量摄入增加21%(5-35%)和49%(27-67%),以补偿能量含量分别下降15%和30%的情况。对于能量变异性分别下降30%和50%的情况,鲸鱼需要分别将能量摄入增加13%(0-23%)和24%(10-35%)以满足能量需求。我们的模型展示了如何利用觅食和猎物特征来估计顶级捕食者能量学中猎物结构变化的影响,这有助于了解对海洋生态系统的自下而上效应。我们展示了在生物能量模型中考虑不同FSR的重要性,因为它可能对获取能量的估计产生决定性影响,并影响关于顶级捕食者对可能的环境波动的脆弱性的结论。