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N-dimensional animal energetic niches clarify behavioural options in a variable marine environment

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-02-15, 00:00 authored by R Wilson, C McMahon, F Quintana, E Frere, A Scolaro, Graeme HaysGraeme Hays, C Bradshaw
Animals respond to environmental variation by exhibiting a number of different behaviours and/or rates of activity, which result in corresponding variation in energy expenditure. Successful animals generally maximize efficiency or rate of energy gain through foraging. Quantification of all features that modulate energy expenditure can theoretically be modelled as an animal energetic niche or power envelope; with total power being represented by the vertical axis and n-dimensional horizontal axes representing extents of processes that affect energy expenditure. Such an energetic niche could be used to assess the energetic consequences of animals adopting particular behaviours under various environmental conditions. This value of this approach was tested by constructing a simple mechanistic energetics model based on data collected from recording devices deployed on 41 free-living Magellanic penguins (Spheniscus magellanicus), foraging from four different colonies in Argentina and consequently catching four different types of prey. Energy expenditure was calculated as a function of total distance swum underwater (horizontal axis 1) and maximum depth reached (horizontal axis 2). The resultant power envelope was invariant, irrespective of colony location, but penguins from the different colonies tended to use different areas of the envelope. The different colony solutions appeared to represent particular behavioural options for exploiting the available prey and demonstrate how penguins respond to environmental circumstance (prey distribution), the energetic consequences that this has for them, and how this affects the balance of energy acquisition through foraging and expenditure strategy.

History

Journal

Journal of experimental biology

Volume

214

Pagination

646 - 656

Location

Cambridge, England

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0022-0949

eISSN

1477-9145

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, Company of Biologists