Diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the Gulf of California, Mexico

Sperm whales occur worldwide and feed largely on meso- and bathypelagic squid, but little is known about the behavioral ecology of this predator and its prey. In the Gulf of California, sperm whales are thought to feed on the abundant jumbo (Humboldt) squid, an ecologically and commercially importan...

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Main Authors: Gilly, W., Bazzino, G., Markaida, U., Gendron, Diane, Jaquet, N, Davis, R.W.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Marine Ecology Progress Series 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13120
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spelling ftipnmexicoir:oai:www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx:123456789/13120 2023-07-16T04:00:32+02:00 Diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the Gulf of California, Mexico Gilly, W. Bazzino, G. Markaida, U. Gendron, Diane Jaquet, N Davis, R.W. 2007 http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13120 en_US eng Marine Ecology Progress Series 0171-8630 http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13120 Movements Physeter macrocephalus Prey Predator Diving behavior Dosidicus gigas Biomasa Satellite telemeters Article 2007 ftipnmexicoir 2023-06-28T10:39:33Z Sperm whales occur worldwide and feed largely on meso- and bathypelagic squid, but little is known about the behavioral ecology of this predator and its prey. In the Gulf of California, sperm whales are thought to feed on the abundant jumbo (Humboldt) squid, an ecologically and commercially important species. In this study, we attached satellite-linked dive recorders to 5 sperm whales and pop-up archival transmitting tags to 3 jumbo squid in the same area and time period in order to record their diving behavior and movements. Most (91%) deep dives by whales ranged from 100 to 500 m (average 418 ± 216.0 m) and lasted 15 to 35 min (average 27 ± 9.1 min). During daytime hours, jumbo squid spent about 75% of the time in the 200 to 400 m depth range, and sperm whales showed a similar dive-depth preference. The vertical distribution pattern of squid changed during the night, with squid spending about half the time at depths of <200 m and the remainder at 200 to 400 m. Although the whales shifted their nighttime diving to somewhat shallower depths, about 75% of dives remained in the 200 to 400 m depth range. Analysis of squid nighttime diving behavior, based on archival time-series data, showed that excursions into warm surface waters were often terminated by deep dives to typical daytime depths, after which the squid appeared to be relatively quiescent. Diving behavior by whales is thus consistent with the idea that they feed on jumbo squid at depth during the day, and we suggest that deep nighttime foraging may target squid that are recovering from stress after recent surface activity and are therefore more susceptible to predation. Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN). Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Marinas Ciencias marinas PDF Article in Journal/Newspaper Physeter macrocephalus El Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN): Repositorio Digital Institucional (RDI)
institution Open Polar
collection El Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN): Repositorio Digital Institucional (RDI)
op_collection_id ftipnmexicoir
language English
topic Movements
Physeter macrocephalus
Prey
Predator
Diving behavior
Dosidicus gigas
Biomasa
Satellite telemeters
spellingShingle Movements
Physeter macrocephalus
Prey
Predator
Diving behavior
Dosidicus gigas
Biomasa
Satellite telemeters
Gilly, W.
Bazzino, G.
Markaida, U.
Gendron, Diane
Jaquet, N
Davis, R.W.
Diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the Gulf of California, Mexico
topic_facet Movements
Physeter macrocephalus
Prey
Predator
Diving behavior
Dosidicus gigas
Biomasa
Satellite telemeters
description Sperm whales occur worldwide and feed largely on meso- and bathypelagic squid, but little is known about the behavioral ecology of this predator and its prey. In the Gulf of California, sperm whales are thought to feed on the abundant jumbo (Humboldt) squid, an ecologically and commercially important species. In this study, we attached satellite-linked dive recorders to 5 sperm whales and pop-up archival transmitting tags to 3 jumbo squid in the same area and time period in order to record their diving behavior and movements. Most (91%) deep dives by whales ranged from 100 to 500 m (average 418 ± 216.0 m) and lasted 15 to 35 min (average 27 ± 9.1 min). During daytime hours, jumbo squid spent about 75% of the time in the 200 to 400 m depth range, and sperm whales showed a similar dive-depth preference. The vertical distribution pattern of squid changed during the night, with squid spending about half the time at depths of <200 m and the remainder at 200 to 400 m. Although the whales shifted their nighttime diving to somewhat shallower depths, about 75% of dives remained in the 200 to 400 m depth range. Analysis of squid nighttime diving behavior, based on archival time-series data, showed that excursions into warm surface waters were often terminated by deep dives to typical daytime depths, after which the squid appeared to be relatively quiescent. Diving behavior by whales is thus consistent with the idea that they feed on jumbo squid at depth during the day, and we suggest that deep nighttime foraging may target squid that are recovering from stress after recent surface activity and are therefore more susceptible to predation. Instituto Politécnico Nacional (IPN). Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Marinas Ciencias marinas PDF
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Gilly, W.
Bazzino, G.
Markaida, U.
Gendron, Diane
Jaquet, N
Davis, R.W.
author_facet Gilly, W.
Bazzino, G.
Markaida, U.
Gendron, Diane
Jaquet, N
Davis, R.W.
author_sort Gilly, W.
title Diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the Gulf of California, Mexico
title_short Diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the Gulf of California, Mexico
title_full Diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the Gulf of California, Mexico
title_fullStr Diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the Gulf of California, Mexico
title_full_unstemmed Diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the Gulf of California, Mexico
title_sort diving behavior of sperm whales in relation to behavior of a major prey species, the jumbo squid, in the gulf of california, mexico
publisher Marine Ecology Progress Series
publishDate 2007
url http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13120
genre Physeter macrocephalus
genre_facet Physeter macrocephalus
op_relation 0171-8630
http://www.repositoriodigital.ipn.mx/handle/123456789/13120
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