info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Pushed for time or saving on fuel: Fine-scale energy budgets shed light on currencies in a diving bird
Fecha
2009-09Registro en:
Shepard, Emily L. C.; Wilson, Rory P.; Quintana, Flavio Roberto; Gómez Laich, Agustina Marta; Forman, Dan W.; Pushed for time or saving on fuel: Fine-scale energy budgets shed light on currencies in a diving bird; The Royal Society; Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences; 276; 1670; 9-2009; 3149-3155
0962-8452
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Shepard, Emily L. C.
Wilson, Rory P.
Quintana, Flavio Roberto
Gómez Laich, Agustina Marta
Forman, Dan W.
Resumen
Animals may forage using different currencies depending on whether time minimization or energy maximization is more pertinent at the time. Assessment of net energy acquisition requires detailed information on instantaneous activity-specific power use, which varies according to animal performance, being influenced, for example, by speed and prey loading, and which has not been measured before in wild animals. We used a new proxy for instantaneous energy expenditure (overall dynamic body acceleration), to quantify foraging effort in a model species, the imperial shag Phalacrocorax atriceps, during diving. Power costs varied nonlinearly with depth exploited owing to depth-related buoyancy. Consequently, solutions for maximizing the gross rate of gain and energetic efficiency differed for dives to any given depth. Dive effort in free-ranging imperial shags measured during the breeding season was consistent with a strategy to maximize the gross rate of energy gain. We suggest that the divergence of time and energy costs with dive depth has implications for the measurement of dive efficiency across diverse diving taxa.