Abstract
The question of how individuals acquire and allocate resources to maximize fitness is
central in evolutionary ecology. Basic information on prey selection, search effort and
capture rates are critical for understanding a predator's role in its ecosystem and for
predicting its response to natural and anthropogenic disturbance. Yet for most marine
species, foraging interactions cannot be observed directly. The high costs of
thermoregulation in water requires that small marine mammals have elevated energy
intakes compared to similar-sized terrestrial mammals. The combination of high food
requirements and their position at the apex of most marine food webs may make small
marine mammals particularly vulnerable to changes within the ecosystem, but the lack
of detailed information about their foraging behaviour often precludes an informed
conservation effort. Here, we use high resolution movement and prey echo recording
tags on five wild harbour porpoises to examine foraging interactions in one of the most
metabolically challenged cetacean species. We report that porpoises forage nearly
continuously day and night, attempting to capture up to 550 small (3-10 cm) fish prey
per hour with a remarkable prey capture success rate of >90%. Porpoises therefore
target fish that are smaller than those of commercial interest, but must forage almost
continually to meet their metabolic demands with such small prey, leaving little margin
for compensation. Thus, for these "aquatic shrews", even a moderate level of
anthropogenic disturbance in the busy shallow waters they share with humans may
have severe fitness consequences at individual and population levels.
| Originalsprog | Engelsk |
|---|---|
| Tidsskrift | Current Biology |
| Vol/bind | 26 |
| Udgave nummer | 11 |
| Sider (fra-til) | 1441-1446 |
| ISSN | 0960-9822 |
| DOI | |
| Status | Udgivet - 6. jun. 2016 |
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