Behavioural thermoregulation linked to foraging in blue sharks

被引:30
作者
Watanabe, Yuuki Y. [1 ,2 ]
Nakamura, Itsumi [3 ]
Chiang, Wei-Chuan [4 ]
机构
[1] Natl Inst Polar Res, Tachikawa, Tokyo 1908518, Japan
[2] Grad Univ Adv Studies, Dept Polar Sci, SOKENDAI, Tachikawa, Tokyo 1908518, Japan
[3] Nagasaki Univ, Org Marine Sci & Technol, Nagasaki, Nagasaki 8512213, Japan
[4] Eastern Marine Biol Res Ctr, Fisheries Res Inst, Chenggong 961, Taitung County, Taiwan
基金
日本学术振兴会;
关键词
Biologging; Body temperature; Foraging behaviour; Heat exchange model; HEAT-TRANSFER; VERTICAL-DISTRIBUTION; FISH; TEMPERATURE; ZOOPLANKTON; ENDOTHERMY; MOVEMENTS; BUOYANCY; EXCHANGE; CAPTURE;
D O I
10.1007/s00227-021-03971-3
中图分类号
Q17 [水生生物学];
学科分类号
071004 ;
摘要
Large pelagic fishes often dive and surface repeatedly as if they were airbreathers, raising a question about the functions of these movements. Some species (e.g., bigeye tuna, ocean sunfish) apparently alternate foraging in deep cold waters and rewarming in shallow warm waters. However, it is unclear how prevalent this pattern is among species. Blue sharks are the widest-ranging pelagic shark with expanded vertical niches, providing a model for studying foraging-thermoregulation associations. We used electronic tags, including video cameras, to record the diving behaviour, muscle temperature, and foraging events of two blue sharks. During repeated deep dives (max. 422 m), muscle temperature changed more slowly than ambient water temperature. Sharks shifted between descents and ascents before muscle temperature reached ambient temperature, leading to a narrower range (8 degrees C) of muscle temperature than ambient temperature (20 degrees C). 2.5-h video footage showed a shark catching a squid, during which a burst swimming event was recorded. Similar swimming events, detected from the entire tag data (20 - 22 h), occurred over a wide depth range (5 - 293 m). We conclude that, instead of alternating foraging and rewarming, blue sharks at our study site forage and thermoregulate continuously in the water column. Furthermore, our comparative analyses showed that the heat exchange rates of blue sharks during the warming and cooling process were not exceptional among fishes for their body size. Thus, behavioural thermoregulation linked to foraging, rather than enhanced abilities to control heat exchange rates, is likely key to the expanded thermal niches of this ectothermic species.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 54 条
[11]   Phylotranscriptomic Insights into the Diversification of Endothermic Thunnus Tunas [J].
Ciezarek, Adam G. ;
Osborne, Owen G. ;
Shipley, Oliver N. ;
Brooks, Edward J. ;
Tracey, Sean R. ;
McAllister, Jaime D. ;
Gardner, Luke D. ;
Sternberg, Michael J. E. ;
Block, Barbara ;
Savolainen, Vincent .
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2019, 36 (01) :84-96
[12]   Diel patterns in swimming behavior of a vertically migrating deepwater shark, the bluntnose sixgill (Hexanchus griseus) [J].
Coffey, Daniel M. ;
Royer, Mark A. ;
Meyer, Carl G. ;
Holland, Kim N. .
PLOS ONE, 2020, 15 (01)
[13]   PREDICTING BODY-CORE TEMPERATURE IN FISH SUBJECTED TO FLUCTUATING AMBIENT-TEMPERATURE [J].
FECHHELM, RG ;
NEILL, WH .
PHYSIOLOGICAL ZOOLOGY, 1982, 55 (03) :229-239
[14]  
Furukawa S., 2015, Journal of Aquaculture and Marine Biology, V2, P00032
[15]   VERTICAL-DISTRIBUTION AND TROPHIC INTERACTIONS OF ZOOPLANKTON AND FISH IN MASFJORDEN, NORWAY [J].
GISKE, J ;
AKSNES, DL ;
BALINO, BM ;
KAARTVEDT, S ;
LIE, U ;
NORDEIDE, JT ;
SALVANES, AGV ;
WAKILI, SM ;
AADNESEN, A .
SARSIA, 1990, 75 (01) :65-81
[16]   Convergent evolution in locomotory patterns of flying and swimming animals [J].
Gleiss, Adrian C. ;
Jorgensen, Salvador J. ;
Liebsch, Nikolai ;
Sala, Juan E. ;
Norman, Brad ;
Hays, Graeme C. ;
Quintana, Flavio ;
Grundy, Edward ;
Campagna, Claudio ;
Trites, Andrew W. ;
Block, Barbara A. ;
Wilson, Rory P. .
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2011, 2
[17]   Moved by that sinking feeling: variable diving geometry underlies movement strategies in whale sharks [J].
Gleiss, Adrian C. ;
Norman, Brad ;
Wilson, Rory P. .
FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2011, 25 (03) :595-607
[18]   THE PHYLOGENETIC REGRESSION [J].
GRAFEN, A .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1989, 326 (1233) :119-157
[19]   Endothermy makes fishes faster but does not expand their thermal niche [J].
Harding, Lucy ;
Jackson, Andrew ;
Barnett, Adam ;
Donohue, Ian ;
Halsey, Lewis ;
Huveneers, Charles ;
Meyer, Carl ;
Papastamatiou, Yannis ;
Semmens, Jayson M. ;
Spencer, Erin ;
Watanabe, Yuuki ;
Payne, Nicholas .
FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2021, 35 (09) :1951-1959
[20]   A review of the adaptive significance and ecosystem consequences of zooplankton diel vertical migrations [J].
Hays, GC .
HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2003, 503 (1-3) :163-170