Estimating total body heat dissipation in air and water from skin surface heat flux telemetry in Weddell seals

Abstract Background Accurate estimates of thermoregulatory costs in air and water are necessary to predict the impacts of changing habitats to individuals and populations of ice-obligate seals. Investigations that would provide such estimates of thermoregulatory physiology over natural activities in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hindle, Allyson, Horning, Markus, Jo-Ann Mellish
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Figshare 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3630938
https://figshare.com/collections/Estimating_total_body_heat_dissipation_in_air_and_water_from_skin_surface_heat_flux_telemetry_in_Weddell_seals/3630938
Description
Summary:Abstract Background Accurate estimates of thermoregulatory costs in air and water are necessary to predict the impacts of changing habitats to individuals and populations of ice-obligate seals. Investigations that would provide such estimates of thermoregulatory physiology over natural activities in free-ranging marine mammals have been limited. This study describes a biotelemetry method for measuring skin surface heat flux in free-ranging Weddell seals. These data are then applied to estimations of thermoregulatory heat dissipation from multiple point measurements. Results Data loggers collecting skin surface heat flux telemetry at four body locations (head, neck, axilla and flank) from 40 free-ranging Weddell seals were deployed and recovered over periods of 1â 13Â days in Erebus Bay, Antarctica. We derive equations for estimating total body heat dissipation from these point measurements and demonstrate the subsequent calculation of heat dissipated from obligate thermoregulatory costs. Heat lost to air or water was described by heat flux sensor data extrapolated across the whole-body surface, as informed by skin surface infrared thermal patterns. Heat lost directly to the ice surface during haul-out was best described by physical features of the seal, rather than environmental variables. Heat flux inputs from the four sensors could be reduced to two principal components, and corresponding regressions indicated that the axilla and flank sensors were most correlated with total body heat dissipation in air and water. Variability in head sensor heat flux was least described by the two principal components. Conclusions This method can be used to estimate total body heat dissipation during daily activities in marine mammals, and under steady-state conditions, it can be used to identify obligate thermoregulatory heat costs. Ultimately this type of data will provide relevant empirical information for parameterizing models of thermoregulatory energetics in ice-obligate seals, which may improve our ability to predict outcomes of altered ice conditions at high latitudes.