Basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.

While biologging tags have answered a wealth of ecological questions, the drivers and consequences of movement and activity often remain difficult to ascertain, particularly marine vertebrates which are difficult to observe directly. Basking sharks, the second largest shark species in the world, agg...

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Main Authors: Jessica L Rudd, Tiago Bartolomeu, Haley R Dolton, Owen M Exeter, Christopher Kerry, Lucy A Hawkes, Suzanne M Henderson, Marcus Shirley, Matthew J Witt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253388
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spelling doaj-2dd2e75fea4b431caf5ea002b589aa6d2021-08-03T04:31:36ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01167e025338810.1371/journal.pone.0253388Basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.Jessica L RuddTiago BartolomeuHaley R DoltonOwen M ExeterChristopher KerryLucy A HawkesSuzanne M HendersonMarcus ShirleyMatthew J WittWhile biologging tags have answered a wealth of ecological questions, the drivers and consequences of movement and activity often remain difficult to ascertain, particularly marine vertebrates which are difficult to observe directly. Basking sharks, the second largest shark species in the world, aggregate in the summer in key foraging sites but despite advances in biologging technologies, little is known about their breeding ecology and sub-surface behaviour. Advances in camera technologies holds potential for filling in these knowledge gaps by providing environmental context and validating behaviours recorded with conventional telemetry. Six basking sharks were tagged at their feeding site in the Sea of Hebrides, Scotland, with towed cameras combined with time-depth recorders and satellite telemetry. Cameras recorded a cumulative 123 hours of video data over an average 64-hour deployment and confirmed the position of the sharks within the water column. Feeding events only occurred within a metre depth and made up ¾ of the time spent swimming near the surface. Sharks maintained similar tail beat frequencies regardless of whether feeding, swimming near the surface or the seabed, where they spent surprisingly up to 88% of daylight hours. This study reported the first complete breaching event and the first sub-surface putative courtship display, with nose-to-tail chasing, parallel swimming as well as the first observation of grouping behaviour near the seabed. Social groups of sharks are thought to be very short term and sporadic, and may play a role in finding breeding partners, particularly in solitary sharks which may use aggregations as an opportunity to breed. In situ observation of basking sharks at their seasonal aggregation site through animal borne cameras revealed unprecedented insight into the social and environmental context of basking shark behaviour which were previously limited to surface observations.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253388
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jessica L Rudd
Tiago Bartolomeu
Haley R Dolton
Owen M Exeter
Christopher Kerry
Lucy A Hawkes
Suzanne M Henderson
Marcus Shirley
Matthew J Witt
spellingShingle Jessica L Rudd
Tiago Bartolomeu
Haley R Dolton
Owen M Exeter
Christopher Kerry
Lucy A Hawkes
Suzanne M Henderson
Marcus Shirley
Matthew J Witt
Basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jessica L Rudd
Tiago Bartolomeu
Haley R Dolton
Owen M Exeter
Christopher Kerry
Lucy A Hawkes
Suzanne M Henderson
Marcus Shirley
Matthew J Witt
author_sort Jessica L Rudd
title Basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.
title_short Basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.
title_full Basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.
title_fullStr Basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.
title_full_unstemmed Basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.
title_sort basking shark sub-surface behaviour revealed by animal-towed cameras.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description While biologging tags have answered a wealth of ecological questions, the drivers and consequences of movement and activity often remain difficult to ascertain, particularly marine vertebrates which are difficult to observe directly. Basking sharks, the second largest shark species in the world, aggregate in the summer in key foraging sites but despite advances in biologging technologies, little is known about their breeding ecology and sub-surface behaviour. Advances in camera technologies holds potential for filling in these knowledge gaps by providing environmental context and validating behaviours recorded with conventional telemetry. Six basking sharks were tagged at their feeding site in the Sea of Hebrides, Scotland, with towed cameras combined with time-depth recorders and satellite telemetry. Cameras recorded a cumulative 123 hours of video data over an average 64-hour deployment and confirmed the position of the sharks within the water column. Feeding events only occurred within a metre depth and made up ¾ of the time spent swimming near the surface. Sharks maintained similar tail beat frequencies regardless of whether feeding, swimming near the surface or the seabed, where they spent surprisingly up to 88% of daylight hours. This study reported the first complete breaching event and the first sub-surface putative courtship display, with nose-to-tail chasing, parallel swimming as well as the first observation of grouping behaviour near the seabed. Social groups of sharks are thought to be very short term and sporadic, and may play a role in finding breeding partners, particularly in solitary sharks which may use aggregations as an opportunity to breed. In situ observation of basking sharks at their seasonal aggregation site through animal borne cameras revealed unprecedented insight into the social and environmental context of basking shark behaviour which were previously limited to surface observations.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253388
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