115 research outputs found

    Body composition changes, metabolic fuel use and energy expenditure during extended fasting in subantarctic fur seal (Arctocephalus tropicalis) pups at Amsterdam Island

    Full text link
    The fasting metabolism of 71- to 235-d-old subantarctic fur seal (Arctocephalus tropicalis) pups from Amsterdam Island, southern Indian Ocean, was investigated during the long foraging trips of their mothers. Body lipid reserves were proportionally greater in female than male pups and higher in postmoult (37%) than premoult (10%) animals. The mass-specific rate of mass loss did not differ between the sexes but was lower than observed in other species. Daily mass loss was estimated to 56% fat, 10% protein, and 34% water. The rate of protein catabolism (15 g d&minus;1) was negatively related to the size of initial lipid stores and accounted for 9% (&plusmn;1%) of total energy expenditure. However, body composition changes during the fast were not equal between the sexes, with females relying more on protein catabolism than males (11% and 5% of total energy expenditure, respectively). Energy expenditure (270 kJ kg&minus;1 d&minus;1) and metabolic water production (11.5 mL kg&minus;1 d&minus;1) rates are the lowest reported for an otariid species. These results suggest that subantarctic fur seal pups greatly reduce activity levels to lower energy expenditure in addition to adopting protein-sparing metabolic pathways in order to survive the extreme fasts they must endure on Amsterdam Island.<br /

    Stomach temperature records reveal nursing behaviour and transition to solid food consumption in an unweaned mammal, the harbour seal pup (Phoca vitulina)

    Full text link
    Knowledge of milk transfer from mother to offspring and early solid food ingestions in mammals allows for a greater understanding of the factors affecting transition to nutritional independence and pre-weaning growth and survival. Yet studies monitoring suckling behaviour have often relied on visual observations, which might not accurately represent milk intake. We assessed the use of stomach temperature telemetry to monitor suckling and foraging behaviour in free-ranging harbour seal (Phoca vitulina) pups during lactation. Stomach temperature declines were analysed using principal component and cluster analyses, as well as trials using simulated stomachs resulting in a precise classification of stomach temperature drops into milk, seawater and solid food ingestions. Seawater and solid food ingestions represented on average 15.361.6% [0-40.0%] and 0.760.2% [0-13.0%], respectively, of individual ingestions. Overall, 63.7% of milk ingestions occurred while the pups were in the water, of which 13.9% were preceded by seawater ingestion. The average time between subsequent ingestions was significantly less for seawater than for milk ingestions. These results suggest that seawater ingestion might represent collateral ingestion during aquatic suckling attempts. Alternatively, as solid food ingestions (n = 19) were observed among 7 pups, seawater ingestion could result from missed prey capture attempts. This study shows that some harbour seals start ingesting prey while still being nursed, indicating that weaning occurs more gradually than previously thought in this species. Stomach temperature telemetry represents a promising method to study suckling behaviour in wild mammals and transition to nutritional independence in various endotherm species

    High Natality Rates of Endangered Steller Sea Lions in Kenai Fjords, Alaska and Perceptions of Population Status in the Gulf of Alaska

    Get PDF
    Steller sea lions experienced a dramatic population collapse of more than 80% in the late 1970s through the 1990s across their western range in Alaska. One of several competing hypotheses about the cause holds that reduced female reproductive rates (natality) substantively contributed to the decline and continue to limit recovery in the Gulf of Alaska despite the fact that there have been very few attempts to directly measure natality in this species. We conducted a longitudinal study of natality among individual Steller sea lions (n = 151) at a rookery and nearby haulouts in Kenai Fjords, Gulf of Alaska during 2003–2009. Multi-state models were built and tested in Program MARK to estimate survival, resighting, and state transition probabilities dependent on whether or not a female gave birth in the previous year. The models that most closely fit the data suggested that females which gave birth had a higher probability of surviving and giving birth in the following year compared to females that did not give birth, indicating some females are more fit than others. Natality, estimated at 69%, was similar to natality for Steller sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska prior to their decline (67%) and much greater than the published estimate for the 2000s (43%) which was hypothesized from an inferential population dynamic model. Reasons for the disparity are discussed, and could be resolved by additional longitudinal estimates of natality at this and other rookeries over changing ocean climate regimes. Such estimates would provide an appropriate assessment of a key parameter of population dynamics in this endangered species which has heretofore been lacking. Without support for depressed natality as the explanation for a lack of recovery of Steller sea lions in the Gulf of Alaska, alternative hypotheses must be more seriously considered

    Temporal allocation of foraging effort in female Australian fur seals (Arctocephalus pusillus doriferus)

    Get PDF
    Across an individual\u27s life, foraging decisions will be affected by multiple intrinsic and extrinsic drivers that act at differing timescales. This study aimed to assess how female Australian fur seals allocated foraging effort and the behavioural changes used to achieve this at three temporal scales: within a day, across a foraging trip and across the final six months of the lactation period. Foraging effort peaked during daylight hours (57% of time diving) with lulls in activity just prior to and after daylight. Dive duration reduced across the day (196 s to 168 s) but this was compensated for by an increase in the vertical travel rate (1500&ndash;1600 m&bull;h&minus;1) and a reduction in postdive duration (111&ndash;90 s). This suggests physiological constraints (digestive costs) or prey availability may be limiting mean dive durations as a day progresses. During short trips (&lt;2.9 d), effort remained steady at 55% of time diving, whereas, on long trips (&gt;2.9 d) effort increased up to 2&ndash;3 d and then decreased. Dive duration decreased at the same rate in short and long trips, respectively, before stabilising (long trips) between 4&ndash;5 d. Suggesting that the same processes (digestive costs or prey availability) working at the daily scale may also be present across a trip. Across the lactation period, foraging effort, dive duration and vertical travel rate increased until August, before beginning to decrease. This suggests that as the nutritional demands of the suckling pup and developing foetus increase, female effort increases to accommodate this, providing insight into the potential constraints of maternal investment in this specie

    Modeling Recruitment of Birth Cohorts to the Breeding Population: A Hidden Markov model approach

    Get PDF
    Long-termcapture-recapture studies provide an opportunity to investigate the population dynamics of long-lived species through individual maturation and adulthood and/or time. We consider capture-recapture data collected on cohorts of female gray seals (Halichoerus grypus) born during the 1990s and later observed breeding on the Isle of May, Firth of Forth, Scotland. Female gray seals can live for 30+ years but display individual variability in their maturation rates and so recruit into the breeding population across a range of ages. Understanding the partially hidden process by which individuals transition from immature to breeding members, and in particular the identification of any changes to this process through time, are important for understanding the factors affecting the population dynamics of this species. Age-structured capture-recapture models can explicitly relate recruitment, and other demographic parameters of interest, to the age of individuals and/or time. To account for the monitoring of the seals from several birth cohorts we consider an age-structured model that incorporates a specific cohort-structure. Within this model we focus on the estimation of the distribution of the age of recruitment to the breeding population at this colony. Understanding this recruitment process, and identifying any changes or trends in this process, will offer insight into individual year effects and give a more realistic recruitment profile for the current UK gray seal population model. The use of the hidden Markov model provides an intuitive framework following the evolution of the true underlying states of the individuals. The model breaks down the different processes of the system: recruitment into the breeding population; survival; and the associated observation process. This model specification results in an explicit and compact expression for the model with associated efficiency in model fitting. Further, this framework naturally leads to extensions to more complex models, for example the separation of first-time from return breeders, through relatively simple changes to the mathematical structure of the model

    Foraging Fidelity as a Recipe for a Long Life: Foraging Strategy and Longevity in Male Southern Elephant Seals

    Get PDF
    Identifying individual factors affecting life-span has long been of interest for biologists and demographers: how do some individuals manage to dodge the forces of mortality when the vast majority does not? Answering this question is not straightforward, partly because of the arduous task of accurately estimating longevity in wild animals, and of the statistical difficulties in correlating time-varying ecological covariables with a single number (time-to-event). Here we investigated the relationship between foraging strategy and life-span in an elusive and large marine predator: the Southern Elephant Seal (Mirounga leonina). Using teeth recovered from dead males on Ăźles Kerguelen, Southern Ocean, we first aged specimens. Then we used stable isotopic measurements of carbon () in dentin to study the effect of foraging location on individual life-span. Using a joint change-point/survival modelling approach which enabled us to describe the ontogenetic trajectory of foraging, we unveiled how a stable foraging strategy developed early in life positively covaried with longevity in male Southern Elephant Seals. Coupled with an appropriate statistical analysis, stable isotopes have the potential to tackle ecological questions of long standing interest but whose answer has been hampered by logistic constraints

    Effets de l’implĂ©mentation d’un lecteur dans l’utilisation des aides cognitives lors d’une crise simulĂ©e en anesthĂ©sie-rĂ©animation

    No full text
    MĂ©decine. AnesthĂ©sie-RĂ©animationIntroduction : la SFAR publie depuis 2016 des aides cognitives dĂ©diĂ©es aux crises en anesthĂ©sie-rĂ©animation. L’utilisation d’un lecteur des aides cognitives a Ă©tĂ© rapportĂ©e dans de rares Ă©tudes amĂ©ricaines comme permettant d’amĂ©liorer les compĂ©tences non-techniques et techniques lors de crises. L’objectif de l’étude Ă©tait d’évaluer l’implĂ©mentation d’un lecteur des aides cognitives sur les performances techniques et non techniques d’une Ă©quipe expĂ©rimentĂ©e face Ă  une crise simulĂ©e au bloc opĂ©ratoire. MĂ©thode : cette Ă©tude est rĂ©alisĂ©e de maniĂšre monocentrique, prospective, randomisĂ©e, en ouvert au sein de l’UnitĂ© de Simulation MĂ©dicale EuropĂ©enne en SantĂ©. Les participants Ă©taient des internes d’anesthĂ©sie-rĂ©animation et des Ă©tudiants infirmiers anesthĂ©sistes. AprĂšs une courte formation aux techniques de management des ressources de crise et Ă  l’utilisation des aides cognitives, les compĂ©tences non-techniques et techniques des participants Ă©taient Ă©valuĂ©es au cours de deux simulations consĂ©cutives dont l’ordre Ă©tait randomisĂ©. RĂ©sultats : 26 participants ont Ă©tĂ© inclus, composant 13 groupes et simulant chacun deux fois. Les compĂ©tences non-techniques Ă©valuĂ©es par le score ANTS Ă©taient meilleures lors des sĂ©ances utilisant un lecteur (45.5 +/- 6.8 points) que dans celles sans lecteur (37.1 +/- 6.8 points). Cette diffĂ©rence Ă©tait statistiquement significative (p=0.0008). Il n’y avait aucune diffĂ©rence significative concernant les compĂ©tences techniques. Conclusion : l’implĂ©mentation d’un lecteur des aides cognitives de la SFAR permet dans notre Ă©tude une forte amĂ©lioration des compĂ©tences non-techniques mais ne permet pas de modifier les compĂ©tences techniques. Ces rĂ©sultats originaux constituent un nouveau pas dans le domaine des sciences de la sĂ©curitĂ©, encore peu connues au sein du bloc opĂ©ratoire

    Etude des accidents de plongée scaphandre chez les seniors (de 1996 à 2005).

    No full text
    Etude de l'incidence de l'ùge sur l'augmentation des risques d'accident en plongée sous-marine. Remarques et conseils

    Seniors et plongée.

    No full text
    Devant le dĂ©veloppement de la plongĂ©e "senior", la question se pose des risques encourus. RĂ©sultats d'une enquĂȘte mĂ©dicale
    • 

    corecore