Diving costs as a component of daily energy budgets of aquatic birds and mammals:Generalizing the inclusion of dive-recovery costs demonstrated in tufted ducks

Metabolic studies on freely diving birds and mammals are reviewed and allometric relations of diving costs are presented. A distinction can be made between three different types of diving costs: (1) metabolic rate during submergence, relevant in estimating aerobic dive limits, (2) average metabolic...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Canadian Journal of Zoology
Main Author: de Leeuw, JJ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1996
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11370/6a423f42-e370-425c-a8a0-c1493fa41edd
https://research.rug.nl/en/publications/6a423f42-e370-425c-a8a0-c1493fa41edd
https://doi.org/10.1139/z96-242
Description
Summary:Metabolic studies on freely diving birds and mammals are reviewed and allometric relations of diving costs are presented. A distinction can be made between three different types of diving costs: (1) metabolic rate during submergence, relevant in estimating aerobic dive limits, (2) average metabolic rate during diving and breathing intervals (MR(d)), and (3) diving costs as the excess over resting costs (EDC). EDC is the most comprehensive measure, integrating energy costs over entire dive series with subsequent longer term recovery from heat loss or anaerobic metabolism. Respirometry experiments with tufted duck (Aythya fuligula) diving in a 5.7 m deep indoor tank demonstrated that in this species diving costs, expressed as EDC, increased at lower water temperatures. MR(d) was not significantly related to temperature, and probably reflects only the hydrodynamic and not the thermoregulatory component of diving costs. In general, the usual practice of measuring metabolic costs only during diving activity seems insufficient to estimate the total costs of diving. Studies that include longer term recovery (e.g., doubly labelled water measurements over entire foraging trips) yield more complete estimates of diving costs. To take diving costs into account in an animal's energy budget, estimates of EDC are more appropriate than MR(d).