The bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: Effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behavior

The extent to which prey abundance influences both bottlenose dolphin foraging behavior and group size in the presence of human activities has not previously been studied. The primary aim of this study was to identify and quantify how wild bottlenose dolphins respond, individually and as groups, to...

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Main Author: Bruno Díaz LÓPEZ
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2009-08-01
Series:Current Zoology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.currentzoology.org/paperdetail.asp?id=11221
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spelling doaj-339f28a522314b119ba4c5e3f96d986d2020-11-25T01:12:26ZengOxford University PressCurrent Zoology1674-55072009-08-01554243248The bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: Effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behaviorBruno Díaz LÓPEZThe extent to which prey abundance influences both bottlenose dolphin foraging behavior and group size in the presence of human activities has not previously been studied. The primary aim of this study was to identify and quantify how wild bottlenose dolphins respond, individually and as groups, to the relative abundance of prey around a fish farm. Detailed views of dolphins’ behavior were obtained by focal following individual animals whilst simultaneously collecting surface and underwater behavioral data. A total of 2150 dive intervals were analyzed, corresponding to 342 focal samples, lasting over 34 hours. Bottlenose dolphins remained submerged for a mean duration of 46.4 seconds and a maximum of 249 seconds. This study provides the first quantified data on bottlenose dolphin diving behavior in a marine fin-fish farm area. This study’s results indicate that within a fish farm area used intensively by bottlenose dolphins for feeding, dolphins did not modify dive duration. Additionally, underwater observations confirmed that dolphins find it easier to exploit a concentrated food source and it appears that hunting tactic and not group size plays an important role during feeding activities. Thus, bottlenose dolphins appear capable of modifying their hunting tactics according to the abundance of prey. When top predators display behavioral responses to activities not directed at them, the task of studying all possible effects of human activities can become even more challenging [Current Zoology 55(4): 243–248, 2009].http://www.currentzoology.org/paperdetail.asp?id=11221Bottlenose dolphinTursiops truncatusdiving behaviorforaging behaviorprey abundancehuman activitieshunting tacticsaquaculture.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bruno Díaz LÓPEZ
spellingShingle Bruno Díaz LÓPEZ
The bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: Effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behavior
Current Zoology
Bottlenose dolphin
Tursiops truncatus
diving behavior
foraging behavior
prey abundance
human activities
hunting tactics
aquaculture.
author_facet Bruno Díaz LÓPEZ
author_sort Bruno Díaz LÓPEZ
title The bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: Effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behavior
title_short The bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: Effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behavior
title_full The bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: Effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behavior
title_fullStr The bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: Effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behavior
title_full_unstemmed The bottlenose dolphin Tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: Effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behavior
title_sort bottlenose dolphin tursiops truncatus foraging around a fish farm: effects of prey abundance on dolphins’ behavior
publisher Oxford University Press
series Current Zoology
issn 1674-5507
publishDate 2009-08-01
description The extent to which prey abundance influences both bottlenose dolphin foraging behavior and group size in the presence of human activities has not previously been studied. The primary aim of this study was to identify and quantify how wild bottlenose dolphins respond, individually and as groups, to the relative abundance of prey around a fish farm. Detailed views of dolphins’ behavior were obtained by focal following individual animals whilst simultaneously collecting surface and underwater behavioral data. A total of 2150 dive intervals were analyzed, corresponding to 342 focal samples, lasting over 34 hours. Bottlenose dolphins remained submerged for a mean duration of 46.4 seconds and a maximum of 249 seconds. This study provides the first quantified data on bottlenose dolphin diving behavior in a marine fin-fish farm area. This study’s results indicate that within a fish farm area used intensively by bottlenose dolphins for feeding, dolphins did not modify dive duration. Additionally, underwater observations confirmed that dolphins find it easier to exploit a concentrated food source and it appears that hunting tactic and not group size plays an important role during feeding activities. Thus, bottlenose dolphins appear capable of modifying their hunting tactics according to the abundance of prey. When top predators display behavioral responses to activities not directed at them, the task of studying all possible effects of human activities can become even more challenging [Current Zoology 55(4): 243–248, 2009].
topic Bottlenose dolphin
Tursiops truncatus
diving behavior
foraging behavior
prey abundance
human activities
hunting tactics
aquaculture.
url http://www.currentzoology.org/paperdetail.asp?id=11221
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