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      Testing predictions of optimal diving theory using animal-borne video from harbour seals (Phoca vitulina concolor)

      , ,
      Canadian Journal of Zoology
      Canadian Science Publishing

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          Most cited references66

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          The Role of Time and Energy in Food Preference

          J. Emlen (1966)
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            Sink or swim: strategies for cost-efficient diving by marine mammals.

            Locomotor activity by diving marine mammals is accomplished while breath-holding and often exceeds predicted aerobic capacities. Video sequences of freely diving seals and whales wearing submersible cameras reveal a behavioral strategy that improves energetic efficiency in these animals. Prolonged gliding (greater than 78% descent duration) occurred during dives exceeding 80 meters in depth. Gliding was attributed to buoyancy changes with lung compression at depth. By modifying locomotor patterns to take advantage of these physical changes, Weddell seals realized a 9.2 to 59.6% reduction in diving energetic costs. This energy-conserving strategy allows marine mammals to increase aerobic dive duration and achieve remarkable depths despite limited oxygen availability when submerged.
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              Hunting behavior of a marine mammal beneath the antarctic fast Ice

              The hunting behavior of a marine mammal was studied beneath the Antarctic fast ice with an animal-borne video system and data recorder. Weddell seals stalked large Antarctic cod and the smaller subice fish Pagothenia borchgrevinki, often with the under-ice surface for backlighting, which implies that vision is important for hunting. They approached to within centimeters of cod without startling the fish. Seals flushed P. borchgrevinki by blowing air into subice crevices or pursued them into the platelet ice. These observations highlight the broad range of insights that are possible with simultaneous recordings of video, audio, three-dimensional dive paths, and locomotor effort.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Canadian Journal of Zoology
                Can. J. Zool.
                Canadian Science Publishing
                0008-4301
                1480-3283
                April 2014
                April 2014
                : 92
                : 4
                : 309-318
                Article
                10.1139/cjz-2013-0137
                00528277-78ae-43ba-bc34-95c8cf2c3ab5
                © 2014

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