info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Pitching a new angle on elephant seal dive patterns
Fecha
2011-08Registro en:
Sala, Juan Emilio; Quintana, Flavio Roberto; Wilson, Rory P.; Dignani, Jorge Pablo; Lewis, Mirtha Noemi; et al.; Pitching a new angle on elephant seal dive patterns; Springer; Polar Biology; 34; 8; 8-2011; 1197-1209
0722-4060
1432-2056
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Sala, Juan Emilio
Quintana, Flavio Roberto
Wilson, Rory P.
Dignani, Jorge Pablo
Lewis, Mirtha Noemi
Campagna, Claudio
Resumen
Elephant seals are one of the most proficient diving mammals in the world and are also one of the most studied. However, their long periods at sea and pelagic habits make research into their foraging ecology particularly challenging. Most current understanding comes from the use of time-depth recorders (TDRs). We used TDRs that additionally recorded body pitch and roll on four juvenile southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) foraging over the Patagonian Shelf to describe their diving behaviour and compared them with those of adults, using standard descriptions of elephant seal dive profile types provided by the literature. Over 280 days of diving data showed that dive types were similar to those of adults (types: A, B, C, D, Eb and Ef) but that dive types A and C differed slightly, probably because our animals were constrained by bottom topography. Steep dive and return-to-surface angles in all dive types except type B indicate that animals generally attempt to maximize vertical displacement. Horizontal displacement was much greater in type B dives, which indicates a travelling function. Pitching and rolling behaviour lends support to the functions ascribed to the dive types already described for adult elephant seals, although type Eb dives are unusual in that the animals appear to be taking prey by up-ending in the benthos.