From high‑resolution to low‑resolution dive datasets: a new index to quantify the foraging effort of marine predators
2015
Heerah, Karine | Hindell, Mark A. | Guinet, Christophe | Charrassin, Jean-Benoît
BackgroundIn the last decade, thousands of satellite-relayed data loggers (SRDLs) have been deployed, providing large datasets on marine predator movement patterns at sea and their diving behaviour. However, the latter is in a highly summarised, low-resolution form, from which it is difficult to make the sorts of important behavioural inferences that are possible from higher-resolution datasets (such as detection of likely foraging events). The main objective of this study was to develop a simple, but accurate tool to detect and quantify within-dive foraging periods in low-resolution dives.MethodTwo southern elephant seals were fitted with a head-mounted time depth recorder (TDR) (recording depth at 1 Hz) and an accelerometer (recording 3 axes of acceleration at 16 Hz) from which prey capture attempts were estimated (PrCA), and a Weddell seal was also fitted with a TDR (1 Hz).The resulting high-resolution dive profiles were used to: (1) calculate an accurate index of foraging effort based on the detection of vertical sinuosity switches (i.e. hunting<sub>highres</sub> time); (2) produce an SRDL-equivalent low-resolution dataset using a broken stick algorithm; and (3) from each low-resolution dive calculate a set of candidate foraging effort indices.ResultsHunting<sub>lowres</sub> time, which is the total time spent in decreased vertical velocity segments of the dive, was the foraging effort index that best correlated with hunting<sub>highres</sub> time. Hunting<sub>highres</sub> mode of SES dives (highly sinuous parts of high-resolution dives) was associated with 77 % of total PrCA. In comparison, Hunting<sub>lowres</sub> segments of SES dives were associated with 68 % of PrCA as well as with four times more PrCA than transit<sub>lowres</sub> segments.ConclusionWe found a low-resolution index which indicates foraging activity within a highly summarised dive profile and which identified most PrCA, despite degraded information transmitted by SLDRs. Used in combination with other measurements of the in situ environment, the hunting<sub>lowres</sub> index could be used in numerous integrated marine ecology studies, such as habitat use studies that are crucial to facilitate more effective conservation.
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