Literature DB >> 29142117

Long necks enhance and constrain foraging capacity in aquatic vertebrates.

Rory P Wilson1, Agustina Gómez-Laich2, Juan-Emilio Sala2, Giacomo Dell'Omo3, Mark D Holton4, Flavio Quintana2.   

Abstract

Highly specialized diving birds display substantial dichotomy in neck length with, for example, cormorants and anhingas having extreme necks, while penguins and auks have minimized necks. We attached acceleration loggers to Imperial cormorants Phalacrocorax atriceps and Magellanic penguins Spheniscus magellanicus, both foraging in waters over the Patagonian Shelf, to examine the difference in movement between their respective heads and bodies in an attempt to explain this dichotomy. The penguins had head and body attitudes and movements that broadly concurred throughout all phases of their dives. By contrast, although the cormorants followed this pattern during the descent and ascent phases of dives, during the bottom (foraging) phase of the dive, the head angle differed widely from that of the body and its dynamism (measured using vectorial dynamic acceleration) was over four times greater. A simple model indicated that having the head on an extended neck would allow these cormorants to half the energy expenditure that they would expend if their body moved in the way their heads did. This apparently energy-saving solution is likely to lead to greater heat loss though and would seem tenable in slow-swimming species because the loss of streamlining that it engenders would make it detrimental for fast-swimming taxa such as penguins.
© 2017 The Author(s).

Keywords:  accelerometry; diving birds; energy expenditure; neck length

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29142117      PMCID: PMC5719181          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2017.2072

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  19 in total

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