Surface and diving metabolic rates, and dynamic aerobic dive limits (dADL) in near‐ and off‐shore bottlenose dolphins, Tursiops spp., indicate that deep diving is energetically cheap

Author:

Fahlman Andreas123ORCID,Allen Austin S.4,Blawas Ashley4,Sweeney Jay5,Stone Rae5,Trainor Robyn Faulkner5,Jensen Frants H.67,McHugh Katherine8,Allen Jason B.8,Barleycorn Aaron A.8,Wells Randall S.8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Fundación Oceanografic de la Comunidad Valenciana Gran Vía Marques del Turia 19 46005 Valencia Spain

2. Kolmården Wildlife Park Kolmården Sweden

3. Global Diving Research SL Valencia Spain

4. Duke University 135 Duke Marine Lab Road, Beaufort North Carolina

5. Dolphin Quest Bermuda, 15 Maritime Lane, Sandy's MA01 Bermuda

6. Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Woods Hole Massachusetts

7. Biology department Syracuse University 107 College Place, Syracuse New York

8. Chicago Zoological Society's Sarasota Dolphin Research Program, ℅ Mote Marine Laboratory 1600 Ken Thompson Parkway, Sarasota Florida

Abstract

AbstractHigh‐resolution dive depth and acceleration recordings from nearshore (Sarasota Bay, dive depth < 30 m), and offshore (Bermuda) bottlenose dolphins (Tursiops spp.) were used to estimate the diving metabolic rate (DMR) and the locomotor metabolic rate (LMR, L O2/min) during three phases of diving (descent, bottom, and ascent). For shallow dives (depth ≤ 30 m), we found no differences between the two ecotypes in the LMR during diving, nor during the postdive shallow interval between dives. For intermediate (30 m < depth ≤ 100 m) and deep dives (depth > 100 m), the LMR was significantly higher during ascent than during descent and the bottom phase by 59% and 9%, respectively. In addition, the rate of change in depth during descent and ascent (meters/second) increased with maximal dive depth. The dynamic aerobic dive limit (dADL) was calculated from the estimated DMR and the estimated predive O2 stores. For the Bermuda dolphins, the dADL decreased with dive depth, and was 18.7, 15.4, and 11.1 min for shallow, intermediate, and deep dives, respectively. These results provide a useful approach to understand the complex nature of physiological interactions between aerobic metabolism, energy use, and diving capacity.

Funder

Office of Naval Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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