摆动和滑翔:精细遥测揭示了海底觅食海蛇独特的潜水策略。

IF 3.9 1区 生物学 Q2 ECOLOGY
Shannon Coppersmith, Claire Goiran, Kate Laura Sanders, Jenna Margaret Crowe-Riddell, Olivier Chateau, Richard Shine, Vinay Udyawer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:有效获取两种关键但空间分离的资源-食物和氧气-控制着呼吸空气的水生动物的日常运动和潜水模式。与鳍足类动物、海龟和海鸟不同,海蛇的整个生命周期都在海洋中度过,并进化出了专门的运动行为。然而,关于自由放养海蛇的潜水行为的精细数据仍然很少,限制了我们对它们的生态和对人为威胁的脆弱性的理解。方法:利用声波遥测技术对澳大利亚西部Exmouth湾和新喀里多尼亚bae des Citrons两种海底觅食海蛇(Hydrophis stokesii, H. major)的5只个体进行跟踪。利用定向水听器连续跟踪每条蛇长达18小时,生成高分辨率的三维潜水路径。过滤后,我们分析了46小时跟踪的106次潜水。结果:海蛇主要进行U型和s型潜水,平均97.2%的时间在水下。大多数u型跳水的特点是有限的垂直和水平运动。s型潜水更为复杂,在海底停留的时间多变,偶尔会中断逐渐上升的过程。潜水持续时间与潜水后水面间隔时间呈正相关,而逐渐上升阶段的深度和持续时间受环境深度的影响。我们还在三个追踪的H. stokesii完成的几次潜水的深度剖面中发现了独特的、重复的波动(“摆动”)。结论:这些高分辨率的数据首次揭示了海底觅食海蛇的精细潜水模式。像水面觅食的物种一样,它们似乎根据环境的深度来调节空气的摄入量,并且在s形潜水的逐渐上升阶段可能是中性浮力。我们假设这一阶段促进了有效的水平旅行,尽管潜在的捕食风险增加。在stokesii中观察到的“摆动”可能在浮力控制、能量保存或觅食方面起着功能作用。我们的研究有助于更深入地了解海蛇的潜水策略,对它们的生态学、生理学和保护具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Wiggle and glide: fine-scale telemetry reveals unique diving strategies in benthic-foraging sea snakes.

Background: The efficient acquisition of two critical but spatially separated resources -food and oxygen- governs the daily movements and diving patterns of air-breathing aquatic animals. Unlike pinnipeds, turtles and seabirds, fully marine ('true') sea snakes spend their entire lifecycle at sea and have evolved specialised movement behaviours. However, fine-scale data on the diving behaviour of free-ranging sea snakes remain scarce, limiting our understanding of their ecology and vulnerability to anthropogenic threats.

Methods: We used acoustic telemetry to track five individuals of two benthic-foraging sea snake species (Hydrophis stokesii, H. major) in Exmouth Gulf, Western Australia, and Baie des Citrons, New Caledonia. Each snake was continuously tracked using a directional hydrophone for up to 18 h, generating high-resolution, three-dimensional dive paths. After filtering, we analysed 106 dives from 46 h of tracking.

Results: Sea snakes primarily conducted U- and S-shaped dives and spent on average 97.2% of their time submerged. Most U-shaped dives were characterised by limited vertical and horizontal movement. S-shaped dives were more complex, with variable time on the seafloor and occasionally interrupted gradual ascents. Dive duration was positively correlated with post-dive surface interval, while depth and duration of the gradual ascent phase were influenced by environmental depth. We also identified distinctive, repetitive undulations ('wiggles') in the depth profiles of several dives completed by all three tracked H. stokesii.

Conclusions: These high-resolution data provide the first insights into the fine-scale diving patterns of benthic-foraging sea snakes. Like surface-foraging species, they appear to regulate air intake based on environmental depth and may be neutrally buoyant in the gradual ascent phase of S-shaped dives. We hypothesise that this phase facilitates efficient horizontal travel, despite potential increases in predation risk. The 'wiggles' observed in H. stokesii may have a functional role in buoyancy control, energy conservation, or foraging. Our study contributes to a deeper understanding of sea snake diving strategies, with implications for their ecology, physiology, and conservation.

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来源期刊
Movement Ecology
Movement Ecology Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
4.90%
发文量
47
审稿时长
23 weeks
期刊介绍: Movement Ecology is an open-access interdisciplinary journal publishing novel insights from empirical and theoretical approaches into the ecology of movement of the whole organism - either animals, plants or microorganisms - as the central theme. We welcome manuscripts on any taxa and any movement phenomena (e.g. foraging, dispersal and seasonal migration) addressing important research questions on the patterns, mechanisms, causes and consequences of organismal movement. Manuscripts will be rigorously peer-reviewed to ensure novelty and high quality.
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