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First published online August 8, 2008
Journal of Experimental Biology 211, 2566-2575 (2008)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2008
doi: 10.1242/jeb.020065
The role of infrequent and extraordinary deep dives in leatherback turtles (Dermochelys coriacea)
1 School of Biological Sciences, Queen's University Belfast, Medical Biology
Centre, 97 Lisburn Road, Belfast, BT9 7BL, UK
2 Institute of Environmental Sustainability, School of the Environment and
Society, Swansea University, Singleton Park, Swansea, SA2 8PP, UK
3 Coastal Marine Resources Centre, University College Cork, Lewis Glucksman
Marine Facility, Haulbowline, Cork, Ireland
4 Department of Zoology, Ecology and Plant Sciences, University College Cork,
Distillery Fields, North Mall, Cork, Ireland
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: j.houghton{at}qub.ac.uk)
Accepted 7 May 2008
| Summary |
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Key words: diving behaviour, gelatinous zooplankton, jellyfish, diel vertical migration, foraging, migration
| INTRODUCTION |
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|
|---|
An intriguing example of infrequent and extraordinary deep dives is found
in leatherback turtles (Dermochelys coriacea Blainville 1816), which
possess a highly adapted respiratory and cardiovascular physiology for
prolonged and deep diving (>1h, >1200 m)
(Lutcavage et al., 1992
;
Hays et al., 2004a
;
Wallace et al., 2005
), yet
range infrequently below the epipelagic zone. Given this apparent
inconsistency between physiological capabilities and behaviour, the exact
nature of exceptionally deep dives in leatherbacks remains unclear. For other
deep divers such as elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) and sperm
whales (Physeter macrocephalus), excursions into deep waters appear
to play a more central role within their foraging ecology and occur far more
frequently (Watkins et al.,
1993
; Watkins et al.,
2002
; Slip et al.,
1994
; McConnell and Fedak,
1996
). Indeed, data-logger deployments have recently identified
prey search and prey capture at great depths by deep-diving sperm whales
(Watwood et al., 2006
). Thus,
if deep dives to similarly extreme depths have a critical function for other
air-breathers but not leatherbacks, why do leatherbacks perform them? This
question has generated considerable interest amongst sea turtle biologists and
has led to the formulation of numerous hypotheses that, until recently, have
been difficult to test empirically (Eckert
et al., 1986
; Eckert et al.,
1989
; Davenport,
1998
).
Unravelling the function of deep dives in leatherbacks therefore
constitutes a long-standing goal for sea turtle biologists as this exceptional
behaviour has been recorded at tropical breeding grounds for many years (e.g.
Eckert et al., 1986
;
Eckert et al., 1989
;
Mrosovsky, 1987
;
Eckert, 2002
;
Myers and Hays, 2006
;
Fossette et al., 2008
).
Nevertheless, it is difficult to extrapolate behaviours observed throughout
the breeding season to the rest of the year given a distinct behavioural
plasticity whereby diving behaviour changes markedly once turtles move into
open oceanic waters (Hays et al.,
2004a
). The opportunity to consider deep dives in this broader
context, however, has been made possible through the development of satellite
relay data loggers (SRDLs; Sea Mammal Research Unit, University of St Andrews,
Fyfe, Scotland) (e.g. Bennett et al.,
2001
; Sparling and Fedak,
2004
; Hays et al.,
2004a
; Biuw et al.,
2007
) that convey not just location, but information regarding the
diving behaviour and corresponding environmental conditions via the
Argos network. Utilising this technological advance, we set out to revisit
three specific hypotheses put forward to explain the role of exceptionally
deep dives in this species. (1) Rates of descent between exceptionally deep
and more typical dive events were compared to explore the idea of deep evasive
dives, with further consideration of how the ensuing post-dive recovery
periods at the surface might increase detection by predators. (2) Water
temperatures experienced by leatherbacks during their transit to great depths
were examined to revisit the idea that they may serve some thermoregulatory
function at warmer latitudes. (3) The temporal and spatial patterns of deep
diving during different migratory phases were mapped to examine the potential
benefits of such behaviour for prey detection and acquisition on transit to
principal foraging grounds.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
|
For all but the 2006 deployment, transmitters were attached to turtles
using a soft harness system (Hays et al.,
2004a
; Myers and Hays,
2006
). For the 2006 deployment, direct attachment was used
involving drilling three small holes through the median dorsal ridge. A
transmitter glued to a highly streamlined catamaran-style base plate (designed
to sit either side of the ridge) was attached using biodegradable, plastic
cable ties that were passed through the holes. For a full description of this
method see Doyle et al. (Doyle et al.,
2008
).
Deriving movements from satellite data
SRDLs were located with the Argos system
(http://www.clsamerica.com;
http://www.argos-system.org).
Each Argos location is provided with a measure of its accuracy, called the
location class. Location classes A, B and 0 are the least accurate, and
classes 1, 2 and 3 are the most accurate (e.g.
Hays et al., 2001
) and were
the only ones used in this study. These movement data have been the focus of
numerous previous studies (e.g. Hays et
al., 2004a
; Hays et al.,
2004b
; McMahon et al.,
2005
; Hays et al.,
2006
) and are only included here as a reference for the location
of specific diving behaviours (Fig.
1).
|
30 m for dives >500 m [see Myers et al. for a
validation of dive profiles relayed via the Argos satellite system
(Myers et al., 2006
Once a dive was completed, onboard software examined the dive profile and
determined the time and depth of the five most prominent points of inflection
during the dive. The time and depth of these five points, together with the
time of the end of the dive and dive duration were then transmitted. To ensure
effective transmission of data, information for each dive was stored within a
buffer on the SRDL so that it would be transmitted randomly for the next 10
days. In this way, the specific dive profiles obtained via the Argos
system were not simply a function of the surfacing behaviour of the turtle
immediately subsequent to each dive (Hays
et al., 2004a
). A dive number accompanied the depth and time data
for each dive, so that it was possible to determine the number of dive
profiles that were not received via Argos.
In conjunction with data for individual dives, a summary of all dive information for 6h periods was also generated by each SRDL. Each summary period contained data for a range of parameters including (1) percentage of time spent at the surface (i.e. saltwater switch was dry for longer than 10 min); (2) percentage of time spent shallower than 10 m; (3) percentage of time spent deeper than 10 m; (4) mean depth of dives to over 10 m; (5) mean dive duration for dives to over 10 m; and (6) maximum depth attained. Although SRDLs include a speed sensor, this always rapidly clogged and ceased to function, so these limited data are not considered here.
Classification of deep dives
A frequency histogram of maximum dive depth was constructed for all dives
recorded by each turtle combined (N=26,146 dives;
Fig. 2). Data were broken down
into 100 m depth bins, revealing that 99.6% of all dives (N=26,051)
were to depths <300 m with only 0.4% (N=95) extending to greater
depths. In this paper the term `deep dives' therefore refers to all dive
events >300 m (Fig. 2).
|
Determining vertical rate of descent during deep dives
Vertical descent rate was calculated from the five points of inflection
assigned to each dive profile. This was achieved in two ways. First, the depth
of the first point of inflection (D1) was divided by the
time it took the turtle to reach this depth (T1). However,
the first point of inflection can occur at varying stages along the descent
phase and may therefore not be consistently representative of the overall
vertical rate of descent down to the maximum depth. A second approach was
therefore also adopted whereby the deepest point of inflection
(Dmax) was divided by the corresponding time it took to
reach this depth.
Temperature data
A detailed description of how SRDLs measure water temperature is given in
McMahon et al. (McMahon et al.,
2005
). Temperature and depth (pressure) were sampled at 1 Hz, and
the results averaged into 1 dbar bins (1 dbar increase in pressure being
equivalent to 1 m of seawater; 1dbar is 10kPa). Twelve depth–temperature
points were obtained for each profile.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Overview of dive data
The following generic data for the 13 tracked turtles are given in
Table 1: (1) total number of
dives recorded; (2) maximum depth; (3) number of deep dives recorded; (4)
percentage of all recorded dives >300m; and (5) mean depth of all dives.
From a total of 26,145 individual dives recorded, 4949 were <10 m, which is
below the threshold at which points of inflection are recorded during dives.
For these dives only maximum depth data are available. For the 21,196 dives
>10 m the mean maximum dive depth for all animals combined was 52.9 m
(s.e.m., 0.35 m). The deepest dive, to 1250 m, was conducted by turtle 13, the
large male tracked from County Kerry in Ireland on 30 December 2006
(18.58°N, 25.79°N). To further ascertain whether our proxies of
descent rate (i.e. rate to D1 and
Dmax) were appropriate for all dives >10 m, we plotted
each profile in turn (N=21,196 dives) prior to analysis. This
revealed a marked uniformity in the shape of the dive profiles (i.e. they were
of a similar V-shaped profile with brief bottom times and direct descent and
ascent phases) rendering the classification of dives into different profile
types (e.g. Houghton et al.,
2002
; Reina et al.,
2005
) unnecessary. Interestingly, the distinct U-shaped dive
profiles detailed by Reina and colleagues (attributed to brief periods of sea
bed resting) were not identified during this preliminary analysis
(Reina et al., 2005
). This is
perhaps understandable as this previous study suggested this unusual
leatherback behaviour reflected the constrained bathymetry surrounding their
study site.
Vertical rate of descent and duration of deep dives
To test for irregularities in deep-diving behaviour that may be indicative
of periodic threats or predator evasion, the rate of descent was determined
for all dives where five points of inflection were recorded (N=20,497
dives). Significant, yet weak, linear relationships were found between maximum
dive depth and the rate of descent to D1
(F1,20496=0.001, r2=0.26,
P<0.0001) and Dmax
(F1,20496=2391, r2=0.09,
P<0.0001). To further elucidate these two relationships, data were
classified into 100 m bins of dive depth (e.g. 0–100 m, 101–200 m)
and mean rates of descent were calculated
(Fig. 3). The midpoint of each
depth bin (e.g. 50 m, 150 m) was then plotted against the mean rate of descent
for that bin, revealing highly significant log-normal relationships for
descent to D1 (F3,5=23.11,
r2=0.93, P<0.0001;
Fig. 3A) and
Dmax (F3,5=121.78,
r2=0.98, P<0.0001;
Fig. 3B).
|
|
T) was determined as
the decrease of temperature within a 50 m depth band, confirming that, in each
case, the rate of temperature decrease slowed significantly below 350 m
(Fig. 5B).
|
Temporal patterns in deep-diving behaviour
The timing of deep-diving events was converted from GMT to local time,
revealing a normal distribution (Kolmogorov–Smirnov test,
P=0.07) in daily time of occurrence. A Gaussian 3-parameter curve was
then fitted, revealing a peak in occurrence just after midday
(F2,20=63.93, r2=0.86,
P<0.0001; Fig.
6).
|
|
Deep diving during different phases of migration
`Distance from home' data (i.e. distance from the deployment site) were
plotted against time for all post-nesting turtles leaving their breeding
grounds in the Caribbean (Fig.
8). Unfortunately, for two turtles (turtles 4 and 5;
Table 1) these data were
incomplete and were therefore excluded from the analysis. Additionally, the
male and female turtles tracked from Dingle (turtles 12 and 13) were not
included as their stage within the 2–3 year reproductive cycle was not
known, rendering comparison with post-nesting individuals impossible. For the
six remaining turtles, post-nesting migrations were divided into four separate
phases: (1) the internesting interval (i.e. movements within the Caribbean
between subsequent nesting events); (2) the transit phase (i.e. movements from
breeding to foraging sites in the northern or eastern tropical Atlantic); (3)
the resident phase (signified by the end of the transit phase at which point
individuals remain for protracted periods within specific oceanic or coastal
areas); and (4) the post-residence phase (i.e. movements away from residence
areas). These phases were defined using a simple criterion for distance from
home. For example, internesting intervals were defined as the time from
transmitter deployment to the time the female left the Caribbean after her
last nest. The transit phase began once the female had left the Caribbean
until a time when the distance from home slowed to a rate of <50 km per
week for two consecutive weeks. Once this minimum threshold was passed the
turtle was said to be `resident' in temperate waters. The post-residence phase
was taken to begin once movements south were again >50 km per week for two
consecutive weeks. Although this method captures the distinct phases of
migration well, more robust analyses using switching state–space models
are required for future studies (Jonsen et
al., 2007
). To assess how deep-diving behaviour varied between
different phases of the migration, the maximum depths recorded during 6h
summary periods were plotted against time and distance from home
(Fig. 8). Next, the proportion
of 6h periods with a maximum depth >300 m was determined for each turtle
during each phase of the migration and arc-sin transformed. Data for both the
internesting interval and transit phase were only available for three turtles
(turtles 7, 8 and 9) as transmitters were deployed on the remaining turtles
during their last nesting event of the season so that they commenced transit
directly after re-entering the water. Student's t-tests revealed a
slight increase in the number of deep dives during transit when compared with
the internesting interval (t=–2.25, P>0.05).
However, it should be noted that this behaviour was quite common during the
internesting period. A more distinct behavioural shift was evident between
transit and residence, with a significant decrease in the proportion of deep
dives at the end of the transit period (t5=4.67,
P=0.002; Fig. 8). No
such difference was detected between the residence and post-residence phases,
although deep dives were recorded during the latter for two of the six
turtles. Lastly, the proportion of deep dives was greater during transit than
in the post-residence phase (t5=2.69, P<0.05),
although this was possibly a function of insufficient data for the latter as a
result of decreasing transmitter efficiency with time.
|
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Predator avoidance
One of the earliest explanations put forward was that leatherbacks dive
deeply to evade predators encountered en route. Certainly, they may
be attacked by sharks (Keinath and Musick,
1993
) or killer whales (Orcinus orca) around breeding
sites in the Caribbean and whilst foraging in the northeast Pacific
(Caldwell and Caldwell, 1969
;
Pittman and Dutton, 2004
).
However, Cropp documented essentially surface evasive behaviour in a
leatherback turtle in the presence of a white shark, Carcharadon
carcharius (Cropp, 1979
).
This included erratic diving, rolling at the surface and violent flailing of
the turtle's flippers as it floated on its back. Even though this anecdotal
evidence suggests that leatherbacks may not immediately dive to avoid
predators, there is certainly a vertical and thermal overlap in range between
white sharks and leatherbacks [adults recorded to depths of 980 m in waters as
cold as 3–4°C (Bonfil et al.,
2005
)], although such studies of this predator in the Atlantic are
currently lacking. Nevertheless, questions regarding evasive deep-diving
behaviour in marine reptiles extend back much further than extant species,
with Motani and colleagues speculating that ichthyosaur genera, with poor
visual acuity at depth, may have contracted the bends during exceptionally
deep predator avoidance dives (Motani et
al., 1999
). Extrapolating this idea to the present, there is some
scope for suggesting that exceptionally deep dives in leatherback turtles may
also reflect a periodic and exceptional predator avoidance response,
especially as high partial pressures of carbon dioxide in the blood (through
departure from normal diving patterns) have been recorded for sea turtles
(Rothschild, 1991
). However,
our data suggest that this is not the case here. For example, during an
evasive dive the vertical descent rate should logically be in excess of more
typical behaviours within shallower waters (i.e. travelling or foraging
dives), yet turtles appear to descend at a reduced rate for dives greater than
600m (Fig. 3B). Additionally,
the physiological demands of pushing beyond the ADL appear to require
substantial pre-dive preparatory and post-dive recovery periods at the surface
(Costa et al., 2001
)
(Fig. 4) that would do little
to alleviate the risk of predation. Although the exact nature of these
post-dive surface (or near-surface) events is difficult to define, owing to
the issues of resolving dive events <2 m (Eckert et al., 2002;
Myers and Hays, 2006
), an
overall reduction in diving activity is clearly evident after deep dives. This
may reflect one of the two strategies used by reptiles to reduce overall
metabolic demands during periods of moderate to severe hypoxia
(Hicks and Wang, 2004
).
Firstly, they can use behavioural reductions in preferred body temperature
that, through the direct effect of temperature on biochemical processes (the
`Q10 effect'), decreases the aerobic demands of the tissues.
Secondly, at a constant body temperature, animals can actively down-regulate
ATP demands (Hicks and Wang,
2004
). So whether breathing at the surface or remaining fairly
inactive in the top 2 m, the proposition that extremely deep dives elicit a
metabolic and behavioural response in leatherbacks remains valid.
Some consideration must also be given to the possibility that leatherbacks
dive to shed the transmitters themselves, which under natural scenarios might
represent behaviour to dislodge commensal or parasitic species such as remoras
(Echeneis spp.). This seems unlikely, however, as leatherbacks with
only small time–depth recorders wired onto flipper tags have also been
shown to exhibit deep-diving behaviour
(Myers et al., 2006
).
Moreover, the inability of other turtle species to dive deeply, which may be
prone to commensal organisms during oceanic transit phases (e.g. green turtles
moving between Brazil and Ascension Island), suggests that this factor alone
would be insufficient to explain the deep-diving behaviour described here.
This reservation also extends to the documented behaviour of female sea
turtles diving to dislodge male turtles during mating attempts
(Reina et al., 2005
). Although
turtles clearly employ this strategy to avoid unwanted attention close to
nesting sites (where mating takes place), the predominance of deep dives
during post-reproductive migrations suggests this factor cannot explain the
majority of such events.
Thermoregulation
The physiological adaptations of leatherback turtles (including low
metabolic rate, large thermal inertia, blood flow adjustments and peripheral
insulation) allow them to maintain elevated body temperatures in cold water
and avoid overheating in the tropics
(Paladino et al., 1990
;
Southwood et al., 2005
;
Wallace et al., 2005
). The
combined inference from previous studies is that leatherback turtles with
increased activity levels (through nesting behaviour) might avoid overheating
by increasing the proportion of time spent in cool waters, thus behaviourally
moderating their body temperature by using cooler water as a heat sink
(Paladino et al., 1990
;
Southwood et al., 2005
;
Wallace et al., 2005
). In
support of this concept, it has been shown that leatherback turtles spend the
highest percentage of time in cooler waters in the early third of the
internesting period, implying that increased heat loads incurred during
nesting require shuttling to colder, deeper waters
(Wallace et al., 2005
).
Therefore, could exceptionally deep dives be simply extreme examples of this
cooling behaviour? Fig. 5B
indicates that this is probably not the case as temperature decreases at a
negligible rate below 350m, implying that the opportunities to shed heat to
the external environment would be only fractionally better deep in the water
column (e.g.
800m) than at more moderate depths (300–400m), and
would incur far greater transport costs. However, given the importance of swim
speeds to metabolic rate, and thus heat generation (e.g.
Southwood et al., 2005
;
Bostrom and Jones, 2007
), this
finding alone is not conclusive. Unfortunately, as the SRDL speed sensors all
failed soon after deployment (presumably through impeller clogging), it was
not possible to conduct any analysis of directly measured swim speeds. This
behavioural component should therefore be incorporated into future
investigations of deep diving to thoroughly resolve the issue of their
thermoregulatory potential. Moreover, such investigations should include
direct measurements of leatherback body temperatures, dive behaviours, water
temperatures, metabolic rates and blood flow simultaneously to provide the
basis of an integrated bio-energetic model
(Wallace and Jones, 2008
).
Prey detection and acquisition
Attempts to locate prey might explain the decreased descent rate of dives
>600 m, with turtles possibly surveying the water column as they descend.
Certainly, for leatherbacks the occurrence of deep dives during the daytime
supports the notion of speculative excursions in search of gelatinous
zooplankton within the deep scattering layer
(Eckert et al., 1989
;
Hays et al., 2006
). This
biological stratum comprises a wide range of potential prey items including
siphonophores, salps and pelagic medusae
(Barham, 1963
;
Barham, 1966
;
Michel and Foyo, 1976
;
Roe et al., 1984
) that are
often concentrated below 600 m during the day and move near the surface at
night in response to diminishing light levels
(Backus and Clarke, 1964
;
Eckert et al., 1989
).
Consequently, the idea that feeding, or attempted feeding
(Myers and Hays, 2006
;
Fossette et al., 2008
), takes
place predominantly at night when prey are far more accessible is gaining
acceptance (e.g. Eckert et al.,
1989
; Hays et al.,
2004a
; Hays et al.,
2006
; Jonsen et al.,
2007
). Put differently, the transit costs associated with deep
daytime feeding may simply be too expensive as the gelatinous prey of
leatherbacks would offer a minimal payback
(Doyle et al., 2007
). This
notion of night-time feeding is supported by the visual adaptations of
leatherbacks such as the concentration of ganglion cells in the superior
temporal portion of the retina called the area temporalis. It is thought that
leatherbacks probably use this concentrated area of visual cells to spot
gelatinous zooplankton in the water column below them
(Oliver et al., 2000
).
Additionally, it has been suggested that leatherbacks may use the
bioluminescence of certain deep-sea gelatinous zooplankton, such as pyrosomes,
to assist with locating suitable prey items
(Davenport and Balazs, 1991
).
However, this suggestion prompts the question that if leatherbacks are
perfectly capable of finding prey in low light levels, why do they simply not
look for suitable patches at night, negating the requirement to dive to
extreme depths during the day? The possible answer may relate to the dichotomy
within leatherback diving behaviour whereby repeated dives to potential
foraging sites occur during the night and extended periods of travelling occur
during the day (Hays et al.,
2004a
; Hays et al.,
2004b
). Thus, the decisions of whether or not to keep moving or
stay in a particular area need to be made during periods of transit (i.e.
daylight hours) if leatherbacks are to maximise their rate of travel to more
productive temperate waters. Although not ideal, the predominance of deep
dives around midday certainly suggests that leatherbacks may make the best of
a bad job by searching for prey when ambient light levels throughout the water
column are at their greatest.
The notion of deep speculating dives during the internesting season comes,
however, with a major caveat as it has been suggested that feeding may be
suppressed in gravid sea turtles (Owens,
1980
). This theory was indirectly supported by Reina and
colleagues who integrated time–depth recorder data and video footage to
investigate leatherback internesting behaviour in Pacific Costa Rica
(Reina et al., 2005
). During
this study potential prey items such as scyphozoan jellyfish, ctenophores and
salps in aggregations or singly were observed in the turtle's field of view at
least once per hour in all deployments but there were no visible indications
of feeding activity. Alternatively, recent studies using beak-opening sensors
have provided good, yet indirect, evidence to suggest that attempts to feed
are indeed made, although further work to resolve feeding from drinking events
are required (Myers and Hays,
2006
; Fossette et al.,
2008
). Nevertheless, even if we accept that the issue of
internesting foraging is unresolved, the key point remains that deep dives
occur predominantly during transit to foraging grounds (where dietary
suppression should not come into effect), yet cease to occur once the
individual enters the residence stage (Fig.
8). This pattern is consistent with previous studies of migrating
leatherbacks, which revealed a more generic shift between deeper, longer dives
during transit (Jonsen et al.,
2007
; Reina et al.,
2005
) and extended periods of very shallow dives at high latitudes
(Hays et al., 2006
). Most
probably, this behavioural plasticity represents a change in available prey
from mid-water gelatinous zooplankton such as salps, siphonophores and
pyrosomes during transit [found at 500–700 m during the day, rising to
the top 100 m at night (Angel and Pugh,
2000
)], to surface aggregations of medusae (e.g. Cnidaria:
Scyphozoa) within temperate and coastal waters
(James and Herman, 2001
;
Houghton et al., 2006a
;
Houghton et al., 2006b
;
Witt et al., 2007
). Bringing
all this evidence together, we therefore suggest that infrequent,
exceptionally deep, daytime dives allow leatherbacks to assess whether
adequate (nocturnally ascending) prey are present at depth and are not
foraging dives in their own right.
Viewed in a migratory context, our findings suggest that if suitable
resources are encountered during a deep dive then the turtle may cease transit
and remain within that area, waiting for prey to approach the surface at
night. If unsuccessful, then migration may continue with deep dives being
employed periodically to assess the water column. This idea is compliant with
the findings of Doyle and colleagues who recorded the long-term residence (76
days) of a leatherback within a meso-scale feature in the temperate north east
Atlantic (Doyle et al., 2008
).
Upon leaving this inferred `prey patch' there was a distinct change in the
turtle's behaviour characterised by numerous deep dives (>500 m) over a 2
week period. Whether foraging conditions had deteriorated or the turtle had
simply wandered out of a suitable patch is unknown, yet once the period of
deep-diving behaviour ended the turtle began to move south at a significant
rate (67.2 km day–1) implying a decision to abandon searching
for prey at high latitudes.
To conclude, leatherback turtles appear not to fit the general model of
migration when responses to prey are suppressed during transit
(Hays et al., 2006
), but
operate as `income breeders' (Jonsson,
1997
) supplementing their existing reserves en route
until some threshold prey abundance is surpassed. Within this context, deep
exploratory dives appear to play an important role in prey location,
particularly during periods of extensive transit. However, further studies are
required to address this theory, perhaps through a meta-analytical approach
combining information on deep dives from leatherbacks at different geographic
locales. Further empirical data are also required on the mid- and deep-water
prey fields available to leatherback turtles so that the potential rewards of
exploratory deep dives can be more clearly defined. For example, if
leatherback turtles were merely adapted to feed upon epipelagic jellyfish
aggregations found at temperate latitudes, then the evolutionary pressure
would lie in getting back to such areas as quickly and efficiently as possible
and not in the ability to dive to great depths. Furthermore, as leatherbacks
spend significant time away from temperate shelf waters, where the abundance
of jellyfish medusae is greatest, it seems evident that mid-water prey may
form a more integral part of their diet than once thought.
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
T
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