将呼吸间隔和游泳速度作为自由活动的虎鲸(Orcinus orca)的遥感健康指标。

IF 1.1 4区 农林科学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Rob Williams, Erin Ashe, Kimberly A Nielsen, Hendrik H Nollens, Stephanie Reiss, Katherine Wold, Joseph K Gaydos
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引用次数: 0

摘要

呼吸频率(每分钟平均呼吸次数)和呼吸间隔(两次呼吸之间的平均间隔时间)可以帮助了解潜水哺乳动物的活动状态、新陈代谢率、行为以及由于社会凝聚力而产生的同步性。此外,呼吸频率还能反映动物个体的健康状况,并有可能成为监测濒危鲸鱼物种和种群(如南栖虎鲸)个体健康状况的一种信息丰富的远程评估健康指标。利用非侵入式陆基经纬仪跟踪收集的数据,我们分析了食鱼虎鲸生态型两个种群(即一个正在增长的北方虎鲸种群和一个正在衰退和濒危的南方虎鲸种群)98 头虎鲸 20613 次浮出水面的游泳速度和浮出水面间隔时间(即平均潜水时间或平均呼吸间隔时间)。重点动物取样用于测量已知年龄和性别的个体在各种活动状态下的行为。我们的目标是评估东北太平洋常住、食鱼生态型虎鲸的呼吸间隔和游泳速度的变异性并得出正常范围,以确定基准呼吸间隔。我们发现,在所有活动状态下,食鱼虎鲸呼吸间隔的中位数在 26 至 29 秒之间,游泳速度因活动状态而异。中位游泳速度在觅食和旅行时相似(分别为 1.6 和 1.7 米/秒),但在休息(1.1 米/秒)和社交活动(1.3 米/秒)状态下明显较慢。与外表健康、年龄和性别相似的虎鲸相比,三头体况较差的南方虎鲸(体况评分处于种群最低的 20 百分位数)的游泳速度较慢,呼吸间隔中位数也较短。呼吸频率、呼吸间隔和游泳速度是衡量自由泳虎鲸健康状况的重要遥感指标,尤其是与兽医检查标准中的其他指标相结合时。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Respiratory Intervals and Swimming Speed as Remotely Sensed Health Metrics in Free-Ranging Killer Whales (Orcinus orca).

Respiratory rate (mean number of breaths per minute) and respiratory interval (mean time between breaths) can offer insight into a diving mammal's activity state, metabolic rate, behavior, and synchronization due to social cohesion. Also, respiratory rate can reflect an individual animal's health and has the potential to be an informative remotely assessed health metric for monitoring individual animal health in endangered whale species and populations such as southern resident killer whales (Orcinus orca). Using data collected from noninvasive, land-based theodolite tracking, we analyzed swimming speed and surfacing intervals (i.e., mean dive time or mean time between breaths) from 20,613 surfacings of 98 individuals from two populations of the fish-eating, resident killer whale ecotype, namely, one growing (northern resident) and one declining and endangered (southern resident) population. Focal animal sampling was used to measure behavior of individuals of known age and sex in various activity states. Our objective was to evaluate variability and generate normal ranges for respiratory intervals and swimming speeds for killer whales of the Northeast Pacific Ocean resident, fish-eating ecotype to identify baseline respiratory intervals. We found that median respiratory intervals for fish-eating killer whales were between 26 and 29 s for all activity states and that swimming speeds varied by activity state. Median swimming speeds were similar for foraging and traveling (1.6 and 1.7 m/s, respectively), but were significantly slower during resting (1.1 m/s) and social activity (1.3 m/s) states. Three southern resident killer whales in poor body condition (had body condition scores in the lowest 20th percentile of the population) swam at reduced speeds and had shorter median respiratory intervals than outwardly healthy whales of similar age and sex. Respiratory rates, respiratory intervals, and swimming speeds are valuable remotely sensed metrics of health for free-swimming killer whales, especially when combined with other metrics as is the standard in veterinary examinations.

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来源期刊
Journal of Wildlife Diseases
Journal of Wildlife Diseases 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
213
审稿时长
6-16 weeks
期刊介绍: The JWD publishes reports of wildlife disease investigations, research papers, brief research notes, case and epizootic reports, review articles, and book reviews. The JWD publishes the results of original research and observations dealing with all aspects of infectious, parasitic, toxic, nutritional, physiologic, developmental and neoplastic diseases, environmental contamination, and other factors impinging on the health and survival of free-living or occasionally captive populations of wild animals, including fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. Papers on zoonoses involving wildlife and on chemical immobilization of wild animals are also published. Manuscripts dealing with surveys and case reports may be published in the Journal provided that they contain significant new information or have significance for better understanding health and disease in wild populations. Authors are encouraged to address the wildlife management implications of their studies, where appropriate.
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