Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions

Quantifying the energetic costs of human induced behavioral disturbance on wildlife is a crucial step to evaluate the potential long-term effects of disturbance on individual vital rates. Standard methods cannot be used for estimating energetic cost of transport because of the large size of most cet...

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Main Authors: Christiansen, F., Rasmussen, M.H., Lusseau, D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier BV 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28955/
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spelling ftmurdochuniv:oai:researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au:28955 2023-05-15T15:36:10+02:00 Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions Christiansen, F. Rasmussen, M.H. Lusseau, D. 2014 https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28955/ eng eng Elsevier BV https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28955/ full_text_status:none © 2014 Elsevier B.V. Christiansen, F. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Christiansen, Fredrik.html>, Rasmussen, M.H. and Lusseau, D. (2014) Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 459 . pp. 96-104. Journal Article 2014 ftmurdochuniv 2020-01-05T18:55:22Z Quantifying the energetic costs of human induced behavioral disturbance on wildlife is a crucial step to evaluate the potential long-term effects of disturbance on individual vital rates. Standard methods cannot be used for estimating energetic cost of transport because of the large size of most cetaceans, and instead energetic costs are inferred from respiration rates. We quantified the added energetic costs of avoidance to whale watching boats for minke whales (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) in Faxaflói bay, Iceland, by comparing minke whale movement tracks and respiration in the presence (impact) and absence (control) of whale watching boats. Energy expenditure was inferred from respiration rates, using published bioenergetic models for minke whales and mass-specific cost of transport (COT) was estimated for different swimming speeds. The sensitivity of the COT estimate to model assumptions was investigated using resampling methods. ANCOVA was used to investigate the effects of swimming speed and whale watching boats on minke whale respiration rate. Respiration rate increased linearly with swimming speed, while COT decreased nonlinearly with increased speed up to an optimal speed between 2.5 and 7.0ms-1. Respiration rates were higher during interactions with whale watching boats at any given speed, suggesting that boat presence elicited a stress response in the animals, resulting in a 23.2% increase in estimated energy expenditure. Swimming speed also increased during whale watching interactions from 1.62 to 2.64ms-1, resulting in an additional 4.4% increase in estimated energy expenditure during whale watching interactions. Thus, whale watching boat interactions resulted in an overall increase in estimated energy expenditure of 27.6%, from 56.54 to 72.16Jkg-1min-1. During interactions with whale watching boats, minke whales swam at speeds that were within the lower range of the optimal COT. This suggests that minke whales employ similar avoidance strategies towards whale watching boats as towards natural predators. Article in Journal/Newspaper Balaenoptera acutorostrata Iceland minke whale Murdoch University: Murdoch Research Repository Faxaflói ENVELOPE(-22.451,-22.451,64.322,64.322)
institution Open Polar
collection Murdoch University: Murdoch Research Repository
op_collection_id ftmurdochuniv
language English
description Quantifying the energetic costs of human induced behavioral disturbance on wildlife is a crucial step to evaluate the potential long-term effects of disturbance on individual vital rates. Standard methods cannot be used for estimating energetic cost of transport because of the large size of most cetaceans, and instead energetic costs are inferred from respiration rates. We quantified the added energetic costs of avoidance to whale watching boats for minke whales (Balaenoptera acutorostrata) in Faxaflói bay, Iceland, by comparing minke whale movement tracks and respiration in the presence (impact) and absence (control) of whale watching boats. Energy expenditure was inferred from respiration rates, using published bioenergetic models for minke whales and mass-specific cost of transport (COT) was estimated for different swimming speeds. The sensitivity of the COT estimate to model assumptions was investigated using resampling methods. ANCOVA was used to investigate the effects of swimming speed and whale watching boats on minke whale respiration rate. Respiration rate increased linearly with swimming speed, while COT decreased nonlinearly with increased speed up to an optimal speed between 2.5 and 7.0ms-1. Respiration rates were higher during interactions with whale watching boats at any given speed, suggesting that boat presence elicited a stress response in the animals, resulting in a 23.2% increase in estimated energy expenditure. Swimming speed also increased during whale watching interactions from 1.62 to 2.64ms-1, resulting in an additional 4.4% increase in estimated energy expenditure during whale watching interactions. Thus, whale watching boat interactions resulted in an overall increase in estimated energy expenditure of 27.6%, from 56.54 to 72.16Jkg-1min-1. During interactions with whale watching boats, minke whales swam at speeds that were within the lower range of the optimal COT. This suggests that minke whales employ similar avoidance strategies towards whale watching boats as towards natural predators.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.H.
Lusseau, D.
spellingShingle Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.H.
Lusseau, D.
Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions
author_facet Christiansen, F.
Rasmussen, M.H.
Lusseau, D.
author_sort Christiansen, F.
title Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions
title_short Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions
title_full Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions
title_fullStr Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions
title_full_unstemmed Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions
title_sort inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions
publisher Elsevier BV
publishDate 2014
url https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28955/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-22.451,-22.451,64.322,64.322)
geographic Faxaflói
geographic_facet Faxaflói
genre Balaenoptera acutorostrata
Iceland
minke whale
genre_facet Balaenoptera acutorostrata
Iceland
minke whale
op_source Christiansen, F. <https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Christiansen, Fredrik.html>, Rasmussen, M.H. and Lusseau, D. (2014) Inferring energy expenditure from respiration rates in minke whales to measure the effects of whale watching boat interactions. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 459 . pp. 96-104.
op_relation https://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/28955/
full_text_status:none
op_rights © 2014 Elsevier B.V.
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