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Autori principali: Gough, William T, Madrigal, Brijonnay C, Hollers, Augusta, Currie, Jens J, Baird, Robin W, West, Kristi L, Fahlman, Andreas, Fish, Frank E, Evans, Lewis, van Aswegen, Martin, Stirling, Brian, Pacini, Aude, Olson, Grace L, Stack, Stephanie H, Blawas, Ashley M, Walker, William A, Bejder, Lars
Natura: Artículo científico
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: The Journal of experimental biology 2025
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41232179/
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author Gough, William T
Madrigal, Brijonnay C
Hollers, Augusta
Currie, Jens J
Baird, Robin W
West, Kristi L
Fahlman, Andreas
Fish, Frank E
Evans, Lewis
van Aswegen, Martin
Stirling, Brian
Pacini, Aude
Olson, Grace L
Stack, Stephanie H
Blawas, Ashley M
Walker, William A
Bejder, Lars
author_facet Gough, William T
Madrigal, Brijonnay C
Hollers, Augusta
Currie, Jens J
Baird, Robin W
West, Kristi L
Fahlman, Andreas
Fish, Frank E
Evans, Lewis
van Aswegen, Martin
Stirling, Brian
Pacini, Aude
Olson, Grace L
Stack, Stephanie H
Blawas, Ashley M
Walker, William A
Bejder, Lars
Gough, William T
Madrigal, Brijonnay C
Hollers, Augusta
Currie, Jens J
Baird, Robin W
West, Kristi L
Fahlman, Andreas
Fish, Frank E
Evans, Lewis
van Aswegen, Martin
Stirling, Brian
Pacini, Aude
Olson, Grace L
Stack, Stephanie H
Blawas, Ashley M
Walker, William A
Bejder, Lars
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Daily energetic expenditure and energy consumption of short-finned pilot whales. Gough, William T Madrigal, Brijonnay C Hollers, Augusta Currie, Jens J Baird, Robin W West, Kristi L Fahlman, Andreas Fish, Frank E Evans, Lewis van Aswegen, Martin Stirling, Brian Pacini, Aude Olson, Grace L Stack, Stephanie H Blawas, Ashley M Walker, William A Bejder, Lars Animals Energy Metabolism Whales, Pilot Hawaii Diving Diving is one of the most important behaviors undertaken by marine mammals. Pilot whales (Globicephala spp.) are oceanic dolphins that regularly forage at extreme depths (∼600-1000 m) and maintain body sizes similar to beaked whales. They are also listed as data deficient, with little known about their population dynamics. To help fill this knowledge gap, we estimated their energetic demands through a combination of multiple data streams (e.g. unoccupied aerial systems photogrammetry, high-resolution accelerometry tag data, stomach content analysis and long-duration dive data from satellite tags) from short-finned pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus) in Hawaiian waters. We estimated and compared pilot whale field metabolic rates from breathing frequency against a more granular cost of transport method developed from morphometrics and swimming kinematics, finding that these methods gave similar estimates of energetic expenditure during foraging dives. We then combined expenditure and intake estimates into an exploratory model of daily net energetic balance. Using an estimate of prey size derived from squid beaks collected from a stranded animal, we found that an average of 142±59.8 squid day-1 (52,000±21,800 squid year-1) is enough for an average adult short-finned pilot whale to reach a neutral net energetic balance. This species has an estimated population abundance of ∼8000 individuals in Hawaiian waters, suggesting that the population as a whole would require 416±175 million squid (at an average of 559±126 kJ squid-1) or approximately 88,000±37,000 tonnes of squid annually, assuming similar energetic requirements for each animal.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_41232179
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher The Journal of experimental biology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Daily energetic expenditure and energy consumption of short-finned pilot whales.
Gough, William T
Madrigal, Brijonnay C
Hollers, Augusta
Currie, Jens J
Baird, Robin W
West, Kristi L
Fahlman, Andreas
Fish, Frank E
Evans, Lewis
van Aswegen, Martin
Stirling, Brian
Pacini, Aude
Olson, Grace L
Stack, Stephanie H
Blawas, Ashley M
Walker, William A
Bejder, Lars
Animals
Energy Metabolism
Whales, Pilot
Hawaii
Diving
Daily energetic expenditure and energy consumption of short-finned pilot whales. Gough, William T Madrigal, Brijonnay C Hollers, Augusta Currie, Jens J Baird, Robin W West, Kristi L Fahlman, Andreas Fish, Frank E Evans, Lewis van Aswegen, Martin Stirling, Brian Pacini, Aude Olson, Grace L Stack, Stephanie H Blawas, Ashley M Walker, William A Bejder, Lars Animals Energy Metabolism Whales, Pilot Hawaii Diving Diving is one of the most important behaviors undertaken by marine mammals. Pilot whales (Globicephala spp.) are oceanic dolphins that regularly forage at extreme depths (∼600-1000 m) and maintain body sizes similar to beaked whales. They are also listed as data deficient, with little known about their population dynamics. To help fill this knowledge gap, we estimated their energetic demands through a combination of multiple data streams (e.g. unoccupied aerial systems photogrammetry, high-resolution accelerometry tag data, stomach content analysis and long-duration dive data from satellite tags) from short-finned pilot whales (Globicephala macrorhynchus) in Hawaiian waters. We estimated and compared pilot whale field metabolic rates from breathing frequency against a more granular cost of transport method developed from morphometrics and swimming kinematics, finding that these methods gave similar estimates of energetic expenditure during foraging dives. We then combined expenditure and intake estimates into an exploratory model of daily net energetic balance. Using an estimate of prey size derived from squid beaks collected from a stranded animal, we found that an average of 142±59.8 squid day-1 (52,000±21,800 squid year-1) is enough for an average adult short-finned pilot whale to reach a neutral net energetic balance. This species has an estimated population abundance of ∼8000 individuals in Hawaiian waters, suggesting that the population as a whole would require 416±175 million squid (at an average of 559±126 kJ squid-1) or approximately 88,000±37,000 tonnes of squid annually, assuming similar energetic requirements for each animal.
title Daily energetic expenditure and energy consumption of short-finned pilot whales.
topic Animals
Energy Metabolism
Whales, Pilot
Hawaii
Diving
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41232179/