| Literature DB >> 25297856 |
Junichi Okuyama1, Runa Tabata2, Kana Nakajima2, Nobuaki Arai3, Masato Kobayashi4, Shiro Kagawa5.
Abstract
Air-breathing divers are assumed to have evolved to apportion their time between surface and underwater periods to maximize the benefit gained from diving activities. However, whether they change their time allocation depending on the aim of the dive is still unknown. This may be particularly crucial for 'surfacers' because they dive for various purposes in addition to foraging. In this study, we counted breath events at the surface and estimated oxygen consumption during resting, foraging and other dives in 11 green turtles (Chelonia mydas) in the wild. Breath events were counted by a head-mounted acceleration logger or direct observation based on an animal-borne video logger, and oxygen consumption was estimated by measuring overall dynamic body acceleration. Our results indicate that green turtles maximized their submerged time, following this with five to seven breaths to replenish oxygen for resting dives. However, they changed their dive tactic during foraging and other dives; they surfaced without depleting their estimated stores of oxygen, followed by only a few breaths for effective foraging and locomotion. These dichotomous surfacing tactics would be the result of behavioural modifications by turtles depending on the aim of each dive.Entities:
Keywords: Chelonia mydas; biologging; diving physiology; metabolism; respiratory; sea turtle
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25297856 PMCID: PMC4213604 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2014.0040
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349