Cost of living dictates what whales, dolphins and porpoises eat: the importance of prey quality on predator foraging strategies

Understanding the mechanisms that drive prey selection is a major challenge in foraging ecology. Most studies of foraging strategies have focused on behavioural costs, and have generally failed to recognize that differences in the quality of prey may be as important to predators as the costs of acqu...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2012-11, Vol.7 (11), p.e50096-e50096
Hauptverfasser: Spitz, Jérôme, Trites, Andrew W, Becquet, Vanessa, Brind'Amour, Anik, Cherel, Yves, Galois, Robert, Ridoux, Vincent
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Trites, Andrew W
Becquet, Vanessa
Brind'Amour, Anik
Cherel, Yves
Galois, Robert
Ridoux, Vincent
description Understanding the mechanisms that drive prey selection is a major challenge in foraging ecology. Most studies of foraging strategies have focused on behavioural costs, and have generally failed to recognize that differences in the quality of prey may be as important to predators as the costs of acquisition. Here, we tested whether there is a relationship between the quality of diets (kJ · g(-1)) consumed by cetaceans in the North Atlantic and their metabolic costs of living as estimated by indicators of muscle performance (mitochondrial density, n = 60, and lipid content, n = 37). We found that the cost of living of 11 cetacean species is tightly coupled with the quality of prey they consume. This relationship between diet quality and cost of living appears to be independent of phylogeny and body size, and runs counter to predictions that stem from the well-known scaling relationships between mass and metabolic rates. Our finding suggests that the quality of prey rather than the sheer quantity of food is a major determinant of foraging strategies employed by predators to meet their specific energy requirements. This predator-specific dependence on food quality appears to reflect the evolution of ecological strategies at a species level, and has implications for risk assessment associated with the consequences of changing the quality and quantities of prey available to top predators in marine ecosystems.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0050096
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subjects Animal behavior
Animals
Aquatic mammals
Biological Evolution
Biology
Body Size
Cetacea
Content analysis
Cost of living
Costs
Delphinus delphis
Diet
Dolphins
Dolphins & porpoises
Dolphins (Mammals)
Dolphins - physiology
Earth sciences
Eating
Ecological risk assessment
Ecology
Economic aspects
Energy
Energy Metabolism - physiology
Energy requirements
Environmental changes
Environmental Sciences
Evolutionary biology
Feeding Behavior - physiology
Fish
Fisheries
Food
Food Chain
Food quality
Forage
Forages
Foraging behavior
Marine ecosystems
Marine mammals
Mesoplodon
Metabolism
Mitochondria
Muscles
Phylogeny
Porpoises
Porpoises - physiology
Predators
Predatory Behavior - physiology
Prey
Prey selection
Quality
Risk assessment
Scaling
Species Specificity
Studies
Vombatidae
Whales & whaling
Whales - physiology
title Cost of living dictates what whales, dolphins and porpoises eat: the importance of prey quality on predator foraging strategies
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