| Literature DB >> 28798149 |
Monique A Ladds1,2, David A Rosen3, David J Slip4,5, Robert G Harcourt4.
Abstract
The energy expenditure of free-living fur seals and sea lions is difficult to measure directly, but may be indirectly derived from flipper stroke rate. We filmed 10 captive otariids swimming with accelerometers either attached to a harness (Daily Diary: sampling frequency 32 Hz, N=4) or taped to the fur (G6a+: 25 Hz, N=6). We used down sampling to derive four recording rates from each accelerometer (Daily Diary: 32, 16, 8, 4 Hz; G6a+: 25, 20, 10, 5 Hz). For each of these sampling frequencies, we derived 20 combinations of two parameters (RMW, the window size used to calculate the running mean; and m, the minimum number of points smaller than a local maxima used to detect a peak) from the dynamic acceleration of x, z and x+z, to estimate stroke rate from the accelerometers. These estimates differed by up to ∼20% in comparison to the actual number of foreflipper strokes counted from videos. RMW and the choice of axis used to make the calculations (x, z or x+z) had little effect on the overall differences, though the variability was reduced when using x+z. The best m varied depending on the axis used and the sampling frequency; a larger m was needed for higher sampling frequencies. This study demonstrates that when parameters are appropriately tuned, accelerometers are a simple yet valid tool for estimating the stroke rates of swimming otariids.Entities:
Keywords: Accelerometer; Biologger; Energetics; Otariid; Stroke rate; Swim mechanics
Year: 2017 PMID: 28798149 PMCID: PMC5612241 DOI: 10.1242/bio.027029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.422
Fig. 1.Frequency distribution of actual flipper strokes counted from video footage for two groups of otariids swimming submerged. The tape group had the accelerometer taped onto the fur, and the harness group had the accelerometer fitted to a custom-made harness.
Fig. 2.Boxplots of differences (z-axis) between predicted stroke rate and actual stroke rate over different RMW (coloured boxes) and Red lines indicate where there is 0 difference between observed strokes and predicted strokes. (A) Otariids with the accelerometer taped on (N=49 trials); (B) otariids wearing a harness with the accelerometer (N=71 trials).
Seal characteristics and summary of the combination of RM and
Fig. 3.Example of how strokes are detected in the accelerometry with an If 10 consecutive positive differences either side of a peak in the dynamic acceleration are detected then a stroke is counted. If more than 10 positive or negative differences are detected, then the stroke is identified at the end of the run of positive differences.