Life in the slow lane: Field Metabolic Rate and Prey Consumption Rate of the Greenland Shark (Somniosus microcephalus) modeled using Archival Biologgers.

Eric Ste-Marie, Y. Watanabe, J. Semmens, M. Marcoux, N. Hussey
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Field metabolic rate (FMR) is a holistic measure of metabolism representing the routine energy utilization of a species living within a specific ecological context, thus providing insight into its ecology, fitness and resilience to environmental stressors. For animals which cannot be easily observed in the wild, FMR can also be used in concert with dietary data to quantitatively assess their role as consumers, improving understanding of the trophic linkages that structure food webs and allowing for informed management decisions. Here we modeled the FMR of Greenland sharks (Somniosus microcephalus) equipped with biologger packages or pop-up archival satellite tags (PSATs) in two coastal inlets of Baffin Island (Nunavut) using metabolic scaling relationships for mass, temperature and activity. We estimated that Greenland sharks had an overall mean FMR of 21.67±2.30 mgO2h-1kg-0.84 (n=30; 1-4 day accelerometer package deployments) while residing inside these cold-water fjord systems in the late summer, and 25.48±0.47 mgO2h-1kg-0.84 (n=6; PSATs) over an entire year. When considering prey consumption rate, an average shark in these systems (224kg) requires a maintenance ration of 61-193g of fish or marine mammal prey daily. As a lethargic polar species, these low FMR estimates, and corresponding prey consumption estimates suggest Greenland sharks require very little energy to sustain themselves under natural conditions. These data provide the first characterization of the energetics and consumer role of this vulnerable and understudied species in the wild, essential given growing pressures from climate change and expanding commercial fisheries in the Arctic.
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慢车道上的生活:利用档案生物学建模格陵兰鲨(Somniosus microcephalus)的野外代谢率和猎物消耗率。
野外代谢率(FMR)是代表特定生态环境下物种日常能量利用的代谢的整体度量,从而提供对其生态,适应性和对环境压力的恢复力的见解。对于在野外不易观察到的动物,FMR也可以与饮食数据结合使用,定量评估它们作为消费者的作用,提高对构成食物网的营养联系的理解,并允许明智的管理决策。在这里,我们在巴芬岛(努纳武特)的两个沿海入口使用代谢缩放关系来模拟格陵兰鲨鱼(Somniosus microcephalus)的FMR,这些鲨鱼配备了生物学家包或弹出式档案卫星标签(PSATs)。我们估计格陵兰鲨的总体平均FMR为21.67±2.30 mgO2h-1kg-0.84 (n=30;在夏末,在这些冷水峡湾系统中,1-4天的加速度计包部署,25.48±0.47 mgO2h-1kg-0.84 (n=6;在一整年的时间里。考虑到猎物的消耗率,在这些系统中,平均每条鲨鱼(224公斤)每天需要维持61-193克的鱼类或海洋哺乳动物猎物。作为一种嗜睡的极地物种,这些低FMR估计和相应的猎物消耗估计表明,格陵兰鲨鱼在自然条件下需要很少的能量来维持自己。这些数据首次提供了这种脆弱且未被充分研究的野生物种的能量学和消费角色的特征,考虑到气候变化和北极商业渔业不断扩大的压力,这一点至关重要。
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