Modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean

Abstract Lipid-store body condition is fundamental to how animals cope with environmental fluctuations, including anthropogenic change. As it provides an energetic buffer, body condition is expected to influence risk-taking strategies, with both positive and negative relationships between body condi...

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Published in:Conservation Physiology
Main Authors: Burslem, Alec, Isojunno, Saana, Pirotta, Enrico, Miller, Patrick J O
Other Authors: Cooke, Steven
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press (OUP) 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coac069
https://academic.oup.com/conphys/article-pdf/10/1/coac069/47234292/coac069.pdf
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spelling croxfordunivpr:10.1093/conphys/coac069 2024-05-19T07:49:04+00:00 Modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean Burslem, Alec Isojunno, Saana Pirotta, Enrico Miller, Patrick J O Cooke, Steven 2022 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coac069 https://academic.oup.com/conphys/article-pdf/10/1/coac069/47234292/coac069.pdf en eng Oxford University Press (OUP) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Conservation Physiology volume 10, issue 1 ISSN 2051-1434 journal-article 2022 croxfordunivpr https://doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coac069 2024-05-02T09:32:01Z Abstract Lipid-store body condition is fundamental to how animals cope with environmental fluctuations, including anthropogenic change. As it provides an energetic buffer, body condition is expected to influence risk-taking strategies, with both positive and negative relationships between body condition and risk-taking posited in the literature. Individuals in good condition may take more risks due to state-dependent safety (‘ability-based’ explanation), or alternatively fewer risks due to asset protection and reduced need to undertake risky foraging (‘needs-based’ explanation). Such state-dependent responses could drive non-linear impacts of anthropogenic activities through feedback between body condition and behavioural disturbance. Here, we present a simple bioenergetic model that explicitly incorporates hypothetical body condition-dependent response strategies for a cetacean, the sperm whale. The model considered the consequences of state-dependent foraging cessation and availability of wax ester (WE) lipids for calf provisioning and female survival. We found strikingly different consequences of disturbance depending on strategy and WE availability scenarios. Compared with the null strategy, where responses to disturbance were independent of body condition, the needs-based strategy mitigated predicted reductions in provisioning by 10%–13%, while the ability-based strategy exaggerated reductions by 63%–113%. Lower WE availability resulted in more extreme outcomes because energy stores were smaller relative to the daily energy balance. In the 0% availability scenario, while the needs-based strategy reduced deaths by 100%, the ability-based strategy increased them by 335% relative to null and by 56% relative to the same strategy under the 5%–6.7% WE availability scenario. These results highlight that state-dependent disturbance responses and energy store availability could substantially impact the population consequences of disturbance. Our ability to set appropriate precautionary disturbance thresholds ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Sperm whale Oxford University Press Conservation Physiology 10 1
institution Open Polar
collection Oxford University Press
op_collection_id croxfordunivpr
language English
description Abstract Lipid-store body condition is fundamental to how animals cope with environmental fluctuations, including anthropogenic change. As it provides an energetic buffer, body condition is expected to influence risk-taking strategies, with both positive and negative relationships between body condition and risk-taking posited in the literature. Individuals in good condition may take more risks due to state-dependent safety (‘ability-based’ explanation), or alternatively fewer risks due to asset protection and reduced need to undertake risky foraging (‘needs-based’ explanation). Such state-dependent responses could drive non-linear impacts of anthropogenic activities through feedback between body condition and behavioural disturbance. Here, we present a simple bioenergetic model that explicitly incorporates hypothetical body condition-dependent response strategies for a cetacean, the sperm whale. The model considered the consequences of state-dependent foraging cessation and availability of wax ester (WE) lipids for calf provisioning and female survival. We found strikingly different consequences of disturbance depending on strategy and WE availability scenarios. Compared with the null strategy, where responses to disturbance were independent of body condition, the needs-based strategy mitigated predicted reductions in provisioning by 10%–13%, while the ability-based strategy exaggerated reductions by 63%–113%. Lower WE availability resulted in more extreme outcomes because energy stores were smaller relative to the daily energy balance. In the 0% availability scenario, while the needs-based strategy reduced deaths by 100%, the ability-based strategy increased them by 335% relative to null and by 56% relative to the same strategy under the 5%–6.7% WE availability scenario. These results highlight that state-dependent disturbance responses and energy store availability could substantially impact the population consequences of disturbance. Our ability to set appropriate precautionary disturbance thresholds ...
author2 Cooke, Steven
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Burslem, Alec
Isojunno, Saana
Pirotta, Enrico
Miller, Patrick J O
spellingShingle Burslem, Alec
Isojunno, Saana
Pirotta, Enrico
Miller, Patrick J O
Modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean
author_facet Burslem, Alec
Isojunno, Saana
Pirotta, Enrico
Miller, Patrick J O
author_sort Burslem, Alec
title Modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean
title_short Modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean
title_full Modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean
title_fullStr Modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean
title_full_unstemmed Modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean
title_sort modelling the impact of condition-dependent responses and lipid-store availability on the consequences of disturbance in a cetacean
publisher Oxford University Press (OUP)
publishDate 2022
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coac069
https://academic.oup.com/conphys/article-pdf/10/1/coac069/47234292/coac069.pdf
genre Sperm whale
genre_facet Sperm whale
op_source Conservation Physiology
volume 10, issue 1
ISSN 2051-1434
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/conphys/coac069
container_title Conservation Physiology
container_volume 10
container_issue 1
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