9 research outputs found
Temporal non-independence of foraging dive and surface duration sequences in the European shag Gulosus aristotelis
Studies of foraging behaviour and respiratory physiology in breath-holding divers often assume that each dive cycle (dive plus surface duration) is physiologically and ecologically independent within a series (or “bout”) of sequential dives. We tested this assumption using time depth recorders and GPS data for more than 42,000 dives in 1289 bouts by 39 pairs of male and female European shags (Gulosus aristotelis) provisioning nestlings. We found distinct patterns of temporal autocorrelation over several dives within bouts, but this was driven mainly by consecutive dives of the same type, that is, runs of V-shaped (presumably prey searching) versus U-shaped (presumably active hunting) dives. We found no evidence of cumulative physiological effects (i.e. fatigue and/or lowered body temperature) across dives within a bout. However, within-individual variation in dive behaviour revealed complex interactions. Longer bouts were associated with more V-shaped dives, including more and longer runs of V-shaped dives. Meanwhile, more U-shaped dives and longer runs of U-shaped dives acted as limiting factors to bout lengths, with longer bouts being associated with more U-shaped dives only later in the bout. Interactions between bout length and body mass, and between dive order within the bout and body mass, also suggested various size-specific patterns in the temporal distribution of U-shaped dives. Long bouts and bouts ending in longer runs of V-shaped dives were more likely to indicate the termination of foraging activity. However, neither dive type nor bout length predicted whether individuals subsequently (i) stayed to forage in the same location or (ii) moved to a new location to continue foraging within the same trip from the nest. European shags therefore showed temporal non-independence across successive dive cycles and successive bouts of dives, likely as a result of temporal and spatial variation in prey availabilities rather than cumulative physiological effects that might contravene the assumptions in models of optimal dive behaviour. dive behaviour, dive cycles, foraging behaviour, marginal value theorem, physiological constraints, TDR, telemetry, temporal autocorrelationpublishedVersio
Epigenetic silencing of CREB3L1 by DNA methylation is associated with high-grade metastatic breast cancers with poor prognosis and is prevalent in triple negative breast cancers
Methylation within specific CpG regions of the CREB3L1 gene in different breast tumor subtypes. The relative methylation was plotted for each tumor subtype. Methylation in regions 2 and 3 show an inverse correlation with CREB3L1 mRNA expression (found in Fig. 6b), whereas methylation in regions 16, 19 and 20 show a direct correlation with CREB3L1 mRNA expression. For all panels: normal (n = 97), luminal (n = 357), human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) amplified (n = 19), triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) (n = 113). Statistical differences were analyzed using post-hoc pairwise comparison: *p <0.05; **p <0.01; ***p <0.001. (PDF 97 kb
Recovery, body mass and buoyancy: a detailed analysis of foraging dive cycles in the European shag
Foraging dives in birds and mammals involve complex physiological and behavioural adaptations to cope with the breaks in normal respiration. Optimal dive strategies should maximize the proportion of time spent under water actively foraging versus the time spent on the surface. Oxygen loading and carbon dioxide dumping carried out on the surface could involve recovery from the consequences of the last dive and/or preparation in anticipation of the next dive depth and duration. However, few studies have properly explored the causal pattern of effects within such dive cycles, which is crucial prior to any assessment of optimal dive strategies. Using time depth recorders and global positioning system loggers, we recorded over 42 000 dives by 39 pairs of male and female European shags, Phalacrocorax aristotelis. Dives either involved a straight descent and ascent, presumably reflecting an unsuccessful search for prey, or a descent followed by horizontal movement followed by an ascent, presumably reflecting active hunting pursuit of pelagic prey. Males were larger than females, but we were unable to distinguish between sex effects and the nonlinear effects of body mass on dive behaviour. Path analysis showed that within-individual dive-to-dive variation in surface times can best be explained as recovery from the previous dive. As expected in a pelagic hunter with unpredictable dive durations, there was no evidence of anticipatory preparation of oxygen stores in predive surface durations. Among-individual variation in dives showed that body mass directly affected descent durations, but individual variation in all other dive and surface durations was driven by variation in descent duration, suggesting a critical role for dive depth in overcoming body mass-dependent effects of hydrodynamic/wave drag and buoyancy. Our analyses test for the first time certain critical assumptions for studies assessing optimal dive strategies in birds and mammals, thereby revealing new details and avenues for research concerning adaptive diving behaviour. body mass dive behaviour dive preparation dive recovery European shag foraging behaviour Phalacrocorax aristotelis sex differences TDR telemetr