Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina

Kelp gulls Larus dominicanus (KG) feed on the skin and blubber of living southern right whales Eubalaena australis (SRWs) off Peninsula Valdes (PV), Argentina. The whales respond strongly to KG micropredation by changing their immediate (acute) behavior during attacks and their overall (chronic) sur...

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Published in:Marine Ecology Progress Series
Main Authors: Azizeh, Taylor R., Sprogis, Kate R., Soley, Raquel, Nielsen, Mia L. K., Uhart, Marcela M., Sironi, Mariano, Maron, Carina F., Bejder, Lars, Madsen, Peter T., Christiansen, Fredrik
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pure.au.dk/portal/en/publications/aabf4d13-8820-40fc-afb6-f9bc006b1aba
https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13716
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spelling ftuniaarhuspubl:oai:pure.atira.dk:publications/aabf4d13-8820-40fc-afb6-f9bc006b1aba 2024-05-19T07:49:01+00:00 Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina Azizeh, Taylor R. Sprogis, Kate R. Soley, Raquel Nielsen, Mia L. K. Uhart, Marcela M. Sironi, Mariano Maron, Carina F. Bejder, Lars Madsen, Peter T. Christiansen, Fredrik 2021-06 https://pure.au.dk/portal/en/publications/aabf4d13-8820-40fc-afb6-f9bc006b1aba https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13716 eng eng https://pure.au.dk/portal/en/publications/aabf4d13-8820-40fc-afb6-f9bc006b1aba info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess Azizeh , T R , Sprogis , K R , Soley , R , Nielsen , M L K , Uhart , M M , Sironi , M , Maron , C F , Bejder , L , Madsen , P T & Christiansen , F 2021 , ' Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina ' , Marine Ecology Progress Series , vol. 668 , pp. 133-148 . https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13716 Behavioral disturbance Micropredation Respiration rate Nursing Swim speed Unmanned aerial vehicle Seabird-cetacean interactions EUBALAENA-AUSTRALIS LARUS-DOMINICANUS ENERGY-EXPENDITURE IMMUNE FUNCTION MINKE WHALES STRESS RATES POPULATION PREDATION PARASITES article 2021 ftuniaarhuspubl https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13716 2024-05-01T23:48:43Z Kelp gulls Larus dominicanus (KG) feed on the skin and blubber of living southern right whales Eubalaena australis (SRWs) off Peninsula Valdes (PV), Argentina. The whales respond strongly to KG micropredation by changing their immediate (acute) behavior during attacks and their overall (chronic) surfacing pattern and body posture to minimize gull exposure. The energetic and large-scale behavioral consequences of these attacks are unknown. To address this knowledge gap, we quantified the effect size of both acute (during attacks) and chronic (not during attacks) responses by comparing the respiration rates, swim speed, and nursing behavior of PV SRWs to undisturbed (control) SRW mother-calf pairs in Head of Bight, Australia, using unmanned aerial vehicle focal follows. Even when gulls were not attacking, PV SRW mothers and calves demonstrated similar to 50 and similar to 25% higher respiration rates, respectively, than whales in Australia. During attacks, PV calf respiration rates increased by an additional 10%. PV SRW mothers also frequently (> 76% of respirations) exhibited irregular breathing postures, causing the whales to potentially expend extra energy by working against their natural buoyancy. Despite no significant increase in average maternal swim speed, 76 and 90% of gull attacks elicited strong behavioral reactions from mothers and calves, respectively. Overall, PV calves spent less time nursing during individual bouts compared to those in Australia but entered suckling position more frequently. Furthermore, kelp gulls seemed to show a preference for attacking previously wounded calves and at a higher rate. These chronic and acute behavioral effects may carry energetic costs, which could have long-term consequences for SRW survival and reproduction. Article in Journal/Newspaper Southern Right Whale Aarhus University: Research Marine Ecology Progress Series 668 133 148
institution Open Polar
collection Aarhus University: Research
op_collection_id ftuniaarhuspubl
language English
topic Behavioral disturbance
Micropredation
Respiration rate
Nursing
Swim speed
Unmanned aerial vehicle
Seabird-cetacean interactions
EUBALAENA-AUSTRALIS
LARUS-DOMINICANUS
ENERGY-EXPENDITURE
IMMUNE FUNCTION
MINKE WHALES
STRESS
RATES
POPULATION
PREDATION
PARASITES
spellingShingle Behavioral disturbance
Micropredation
Respiration rate
Nursing
Swim speed
Unmanned aerial vehicle
Seabird-cetacean interactions
EUBALAENA-AUSTRALIS
LARUS-DOMINICANUS
ENERGY-EXPENDITURE
IMMUNE FUNCTION
MINKE WHALES
STRESS
RATES
POPULATION
PREDATION
PARASITES
Azizeh, Taylor R.
Sprogis, Kate R.
Soley, Raquel
Nielsen, Mia L. K.
Uhart, Marcela M.
Sironi, Mariano
Maron, Carina F.
Bejder, Lars
Madsen, Peter T.
Christiansen, Fredrik
Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina
topic_facet Behavioral disturbance
Micropredation
Respiration rate
Nursing
Swim speed
Unmanned aerial vehicle
Seabird-cetacean interactions
EUBALAENA-AUSTRALIS
LARUS-DOMINICANUS
ENERGY-EXPENDITURE
IMMUNE FUNCTION
MINKE WHALES
STRESS
RATES
POPULATION
PREDATION
PARASITES
description Kelp gulls Larus dominicanus (KG) feed on the skin and blubber of living southern right whales Eubalaena australis (SRWs) off Peninsula Valdes (PV), Argentina. The whales respond strongly to KG micropredation by changing their immediate (acute) behavior during attacks and their overall (chronic) surfacing pattern and body posture to minimize gull exposure. The energetic and large-scale behavioral consequences of these attacks are unknown. To address this knowledge gap, we quantified the effect size of both acute (during attacks) and chronic (not during attacks) responses by comparing the respiration rates, swim speed, and nursing behavior of PV SRWs to undisturbed (control) SRW mother-calf pairs in Head of Bight, Australia, using unmanned aerial vehicle focal follows. Even when gulls were not attacking, PV SRW mothers and calves demonstrated similar to 50 and similar to 25% higher respiration rates, respectively, than whales in Australia. During attacks, PV calf respiration rates increased by an additional 10%. PV SRW mothers also frequently (> 76% of respirations) exhibited irregular breathing postures, causing the whales to potentially expend extra energy by working against their natural buoyancy. Despite no significant increase in average maternal swim speed, 76 and 90% of gull attacks elicited strong behavioral reactions from mothers and calves, respectively. Overall, PV calves spent less time nursing during individual bouts compared to those in Australia but entered suckling position more frequently. Furthermore, kelp gulls seemed to show a preference for attacking previously wounded calves and at a higher rate. These chronic and acute behavioral effects may carry energetic costs, which could have long-term consequences for SRW survival and reproduction.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Azizeh, Taylor R.
Sprogis, Kate R.
Soley, Raquel
Nielsen, Mia L. K.
Uhart, Marcela M.
Sironi, Mariano
Maron, Carina F.
Bejder, Lars
Madsen, Peter T.
Christiansen, Fredrik
author_facet Azizeh, Taylor R.
Sprogis, Kate R.
Soley, Raquel
Nielsen, Mia L. K.
Uhart, Marcela M.
Sironi, Mariano
Maron, Carina F.
Bejder, Lars
Madsen, Peter T.
Christiansen, Fredrik
author_sort Azizeh, Taylor R.
title Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina
title_short Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina
title_full Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina
title_fullStr Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina
title_full_unstemmed Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina
title_sort acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off peninsula valdes, argentina
publishDate 2021
url https://pure.au.dk/portal/en/publications/aabf4d13-8820-40fc-afb6-f9bc006b1aba
https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13716
genre Southern Right Whale
genre_facet Southern Right Whale
op_source Azizeh , T R , Sprogis , K R , Soley , R , Nielsen , M L K , Uhart , M M , Sironi , M , Maron , C F , Bejder , L , Madsen , P T & Christiansen , F 2021 , ' Acute and chronic behavioral effects of kelp gull micropredation on southern right whale mother-calf pairs off Peninsula Valdes, Argentina ' , Marine Ecology Progress Series , vol. 668 , pp. 133-148 . https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13716
op_relation https://pure.au.dk/portal/en/publications/aabf4d13-8820-40fc-afb6-f9bc006b1aba
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3354/meps13716
container_title Marine Ecology Progress Series
container_volume 668
container_start_page 133
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