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Feeding Ecology of Wild Migratory Tunas Revealed by Archival Tag Records of Visceral Warming
by
Bestley, Sophie
, Gunn, John S.
, Patterson, Toby A.
, Hindell, Mark A.
in
Agnatha. Pisces
/ Ambient temperature
/ Animal and plant ecology
/ Animal ecology
/ Animal Migration
/ Animal Migration - physiology
/ Animal, plant and microbial ecology
/ Animals
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ body cavities
/ Body Temperature
/ Coastal ecology
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Feeding
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Feeding Behavior - physiology
/ feeding telemetry
/ Fish
/ Forage
/ Foraging
/ foraging behaviour
/ Foraging Ecology
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ General aspects
/ Habitat utilization
/ habitats
/ Human ecology
/ Indian Ocean
/ long‐distance migration
/ Marine biology
/ Marine ecology
/ Marine fishes
/ migratory behavior
/ Migratory species
/ motivation
/ oceanic residencies
/ pelagic predators
/ physiology
/ Predators
/ Resource availability
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Seasons
/ Summer
/ surface temperature
/ Tagging
/ Theory
/ Thunnus
/ Thunnus thynnus
/ Time Factors
/ Time series
/ time series analysis
/ Tuna
/ Tuna - physiology
/ Vertebrates: general zoology, morphology, phylogeny, systematics, cytogenetics, geographical distribution
/ Water temperature
/ Wildlife ecology
2008
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Feeding Ecology of Wild Migratory Tunas Revealed by Archival Tag Records of Visceral Warming
by
Bestley, Sophie
, Gunn, John S.
, Patterson, Toby A.
, Hindell, Mark A.
in
Agnatha. Pisces
/ Ambient temperature
/ Animal and plant ecology
/ Animal ecology
/ Animal Migration
/ Animal Migration - physiology
/ Animal, plant and microbial ecology
/ Animals
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ body cavities
/ Body Temperature
/ Coastal ecology
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Feeding
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Feeding Behavior - physiology
/ feeding telemetry
/ Fish
/ Forage
/ Foraging
/ foraging behaviour
/ Foraging Ecology
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ General aspects
/ Habitat utilization
/ habitats
/ Human ecology
/ Indian Ocean
/ long‐distance migration
/ Marine biology
/ Marine ecology
/ Marine fishes
/ migratory behavior
/ Migratory species
/ motivation
/ oceanic residencies
/ pelagic predators
/ physiology
/ Predators
/ Resource availability
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Seasons
/ Summer
/ surface temperature
/ Tagging
/ Theory
/ Thunnus
/ Thunnus thynnus
/ Time Factors
/ Time series
/ time series analysis
/ Tuna
/ Tuna - physiology
/ Vertebrates: general zoology, morphology, phylogeny, systematics, cytogenetics, geographical distribution
/ Water temperature
/ Wildlife ecology
2008
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Feeding Ecology of Wild Migratory Tunas Revealed by Archival Tag Records of Visceral Warming
by
Bestley, Sophie
, Gunn, John S.
, Patterson, Toby A.
, Hindell, Mark A.
in
Agnatha. Pisces
/ Ambient temperature
/ Animal and plant ecology
/ Animal ecology
/ Animal Migration
/ Animal Migration - physiology
/ Animal, plant and microbial ecology
/ Animals
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ body cavities
/ Body Temperature
/ Coastal ecology
/ Ecology
/ Ecosystem
/ Feeding
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Feeding Behavior - physiology
/ feeding telemetry
/ Fish
/ Forage
/ Foraging
/ foraging behaviour
/ Foraging Ecology
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ General aspects
/ Habitat utilization
/ habitats
/ Human ecology
/ Indian Ocean
/ long‐distance migration
/ Marine biology
/ Marine ecology
/ Marine fishes
/ migratory behavior
/ Migratory species
/ motivation
/ oceanic residencies
/ pelagic predators
/ physiology
/ Predators
/ Resource availability
/ Sea surface temperature
/ Seasons
/ Summer
/ surface temperature
/ Tagging
/ Theory
/ Thunnus
/ Thunnus thynnus
/ Time Factors
/ Time series
/ time series analysis
/ Tuna
/ Tuna - physiology
/ Vertebrates: general zoology, morphology, phylogeny, systematics, cytogenetics, geographical distribution
/ Water temperature
/ Wildlife ecology
2008
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Feeding Ecology of Wild Migratory Tunas Revealed by Archival Tag Records of Visceral Warming
Journal Article
Feeding Ecology of Wild Migratory Tunas Revealed by Archival Tag Records of Visceral Warming
2008
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Overview
1. Seasonal long-distance migrations are often expected to be related to resource distribution, and foraging theory predicts that animals should spend more time in areas with relatively richer resources. Yet for highly migratory marine species, data on feeding success are difficult to obtain. We analysed the temporal feeding patterns of wild juvenile southern bluefin tuna from visceral warming patterns recorded by archival tags implanted within the body cavity. 2. Data collected during 1998-2000 totalled 6221 days, with individual time series (n = 19) varying from 141 to 496 days. These data span an annual migration circuit including a coastal summer residency within Australian waters and subsequent migration into the temperate south Indian Ocean. 3. Individual fish recommenced feeding between 5 and 38 days after tagging, and feeding events (n = 5194) were subsequently identified on 76·3 ± 5·8% of days giving a mean estimated daily intake of 0·75 ± 0·05 kg. 4. The number of feeding events varied significantly with time of day with the greatest number occurring around dawn (58·2 ± 8·0%). Night feeding, although rare (5·7 ± 1·3%), was linked to the full moon quarter. Southern bluefin tuna foraged in ambient water temperatures ranging from 4·9 °C to 22·9 °C and depths ranging from the surface to 672 m, with different targeting strategies evident between seasons. 5. No clear relationship was found between feeding success and time spent within an area. This was primarily due to high individual variability, with both positive and negative relationships observed at all spatial scales examined (grid ranges of 2 × 2° to 10 × 10°). Assuming feeding success is proportional to forage density, our data do not support the hypothesis that these predators concentrate their activity in areas of higher resource availability. 6. Multiple-day fasting periods were recorded by most individuals. The majority of these (87·8%) occurred during periods of apparent residency within warmer waters (sea surface temperature > 15 °C) at the northern edge of the observed migratory range. These previously undocumented nonfeeding periods may indicate alternative motivations for residency. 7. Our results demonstrate the importance of obtaining information on feeding when interpreting habitat utilization from individual animal tracks.
Publisher
British Ecological Society,Blackwell Publishing Ltd,Blackwell
Subject
/ Animal Migration - physiology
/ Animal, plant and microbial ecology
/ Animals
/ Biological and medical sciences
/ Ecology
/ Feeding
/ Feeding Behavior - physiology
/ Fish
/ Forage
/ Foraging
/ Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
/ habitats
/ Seasons
/ Summer
/ Tagging
/ Theory
/ Thunnus
/ Tuna
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