| Marine Ecology Progress Series | |
| Visual and behavioral evidence indicates active hunting by sperm whales | |
| Masao Amano1  Kagari Aoki1  Kyoichi Mori1  Ryosuke Okamoto1  Katsufumi Sato1  Tsunemi Kubodera1  | |
| 关键词: Animal-borne camera; Cetacean; Data logger; Diving behavior; Hunting; Swim speed; Physeter macrocephalus; | |
| DOI : 10.3354/meps11141 | |
| 学科分类:海洋学与技术 | |
| 来源: Inter-Research | |
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【 摘 要 】
ABSTRACT: It is hypothesized that sperm whales employ active pursuit strategies for hunting prey, mainly deep-sea squid at great depths, but no visual evidence has been obtained to confirm this. We recorded the hunting behavior of sperm whales using animal-borne cameras and accelerometers simultaneously deployed on 17 whales, and obtained 42.8 h of diving data, including 17715 images. A statistical comparison indicated no clear effect of light (with or without flashing white lights from cameras) on diving behavior of tagged whales. Although 98.5% of the still images were of empty water and uninformative, 5 classes of images with visible material were identified: (1) suspended material, possibly squid ink (n = 17), (2) unidentified particles (n = 4), (3) possible animal body parts (n = 2), (4) other sperm whales (n = 221), and (5) the seafloor (n = 8). All image classes were recorded at deeper depths (mean ± SD = 785 ± 140 m), except Class 4 images, which were recorded only at depths <339 m, suggesting that tagged whales swam alone while foraging at great depths. Simultaneous use of speed and image sensors revealed that Class 1 images were associated with bursts of speed up to approximately twice (3.3 ± 1.0 m s-1, max. 6 m s-1) the mean swim speed (1.8 ± 0.4 m s-1). These images, likely derived during chasing prey, support the hypothesis that sperm whales actively hunt to capture prey.
【 授权许可】
Unknown
【 预 览 】
| Files | Size | Format | View |
|---|---|---|---|
| RO201912010136405ZK.pdf | 1146KB |
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