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Metabolic costs of foraging and the management of O2 and CO2 stores in Steller sea lions

Authors :
Caroline Svärd
David A. S. Rosen
David R. Jones
Andrew W. Trites
Andreas Fahlman
Source :
Journal of Experimental Biology. 211:3573-3580
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
The Company of Biologists, 2008.

Abstract

SUMMARY The metabolic costs of foraging and the management of O2 and CO2 stores during breath-hold diving was investigated in three female Steller sea lions (Eumetopias jubatus) trained to dive between 10 and 50 m (N=1142 dives). Each trial consisted of two to eight dives separated by surface intervals that were determined by the sea lion(spontaneous trials) or by the researcher (conditioned trials). During conditioned trials, surface intervals were long enough for O2 to return to pre-dive levels between each dive. The metabolic cost of each dive event (dive+surface interval; DMR) was measured using flow-through respirometry. The respiratory exchange ratio(V̇O2/V̇CO2)was significantly lower during spontaneous trials compared with conditioned trials. DMR was significantly higher during spontaneous trials and decreased exponentially with dive duration. A similar decrease in DMR was not as evident during conditioned trials. DMR could not be accurately estimated from the surface interval (SI) following individual dives that had short SIs (50 s). DMR decreased by 15%, but did not differ significantly from surface metabolic rates (MRS) when dive duration increased from 1 to 7 min. Overall,these data suggest that DMR is almost the same as MRS, and that Steller sea lions incur an O2 debt during spontaneous diving that is not repaid until the end of the dive bout. This has important consequences in differentiating between the actual and `apparent' metabolic rate during diving, and may explain some of the differences in metabolic rates reported in pinniped species.

Details

ISSN :
14779145 and 00220949
Volume :
211
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e8bdbd4f3d09a4da9b5c437eff9182e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.023655